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THE VIDEO SONGS AS A TOOL TO ENHANCE LISTENING SKILLS IN
FIRST GRADE STUDENTS AT PRADO VERANIEGO SCHOOL
SILVIA ALICIA VENEGAS PINILLA
UNIVERSIDAD PEDAGÓGICA NACIONAL
FACULTAD DE HUMANIDADES
LICENCIATURA EN EDUCACIÓN BÁSICA CON ÉNFASIS EN HUMANIDADES:
ESPAÑOL Y LENGUAS EXTRANJERAS
BOGOTÁ 2017
THE VIDEO SONGS AS A TOOL TO ENHANCE LISTENING SKILLS IN
FIRST GRADE STUDENTS AT PRADO VERANIEGO SCHOOL
SILVIA ALICIA VENEGAS PINILLA
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UNIVERSIDAD PEDAGÓGICA NACIONAL
FACULTAD DE HUMANIDADES
LICENCIATURA EN EDUCACIÓN BÁSICA CON ÉNFASIS EN HUMANIDADES:
ESPAÑOL Y LENGUAS EXTRANJERAS
BOGOTÁ 2017
Pedagogical research Project presented to
get Bachelor’s Degree in Education
Majoring Spanish and Modern Languages
Research coordinator:
Professor Jairo Rincón
NOTE OF ACCEPTANCE
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President of the Jury’s signature
Jairo Rincón
Research coordinator
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
…To God: my guide and strength.
…To Damian and Manuela, my most illustrious professors.
…To my beloved husband, who has been my support, my ally and my pal through all these years.
…To my parents, role models in and outside the home.
…To my teachers and students whose patience, guidance and helpfulness made all this possible.
RESUMEN ANALÍTICO EN EDUCACIÓN - RAE
1. Información General
Tipo de documento Trabajo de grado
Acceso al documento Universidad Pedagógica Nacional. Biblioteca Central
Título del documento THE VIDEO SONGS AS A TOOL TO ENHANCE LISTENING
SKILLS IN FIRST GRADE STUDENTS AT PRADO VERANIEGO
SCHOOL
(Las canciones en video como herramienta para fortalecer las
habilidades de escucha en estudiantes de primer grado del Colegio
Prado Veraniego)
Autor(es) Venegas Pinilla, Silvia Alicia
Director Rincón, Jairo
Publicación Bogotá. Universidad Pedagógica Nacional, 2017. 104 p.
Unidad Patrocinante Universidad Pedagógica Nacional
Palabras Clave CANCIONES EN VIDEO, RESPUESTA FÍSICA TOTAL,
HABILIDADES DE ESCUCHA, PARTICIPACIÓN,
APRESTAMIENTO, INTERACCIÓN, INTERÉS, VOCABULARIO.
2. Descripción
Esta investigación se desarrolló con el objetivo de fortalecer las habilidades de escucha en los
estudiantes de primer grado del I.E.D. Prado Veraniego, quienes tienen el primer acercamiento
a la lengua extranjera. Para este fin se tuvieron en cuenta los principios de la investigación
acción. La intervención pedagógica se apoyó en los principios del método de respuesta física
total y las canciones en video para contribuir a la creación de un entorno más propicio para el
aprendizaje de la lengua extranjera. La intervención se desarrolló durante tres momentos
metodológicos, el primero fue la observación durante la cual se hizo el diagnóstico de la
población, y se evidenciaron sus necesidades, lo que permitió guiar la intervención cuya
planeación y ejecución se desarrolló en un segundo momento para finalizar con la compilación
y el análisis de los datos recolectados de manera que se pudiera validar o no el planteamiento
de esta propuesta.
3. Fuentes
ASHER, J. Organizing your Classroom for Successful Second Language Acquisition.
BANDURA, A. (1971). Social Learning Theory. General Learning Corporation. Stanford
University.
BLOOM, B. S. (1956) Taxonomy of Educational Objectives. Vol. 1. New York.
BROWN, H. (2007). Teaching by Principles, an Interactive Approach to Language Pedagogy.
Pearson education.
CHOMSKY, N. (1986). Knowledge of language. Its nature, origin and use. Edited by Ruth
Nanda Anshen.
COFFEY, A. & ATKINSON, P. (1996). Making sense of qualitatice data: Complementary
research strategies. Sage Publications.
CRANDALL, J. (2000). Language Teacher Education In: Annual Review of Applied
Linguistics. Vol 20. Nª 34-35.Cambridge University Press.
CRUZ, E. (2014). The video as a technological resource that allows the design of adequate
material to initiate learning processes in EFL for first grade students of Prado Veraniego
School. Universidad Pedagógica Nacional.
DIAMOND, A. Chomsky’s Language Acquisition Device: Definition and Explanation.
Retreived from: http://study.com/academy/lesson/chomskys-language-acquisition-device-
definition-lesson-quiz
DOWNS, L. (2008). Listening skills training. American Society for Training and
Development.
ENGH, D. (2013). Why use music in English language learning? A survey of the literature.
English language teaching Review. Vol. 6 Nª 2. Canadian center of science and education.
FERRANCE, E. (2000). Action Research. Brown University.
FLETCHER, P. & GARMAN, M. (editors). (1979) Language acquisition. Studies in first
language development. Cambridge University Press.
GREY, K. Academic Readiness: Definition and assessment. Taken from: http://study.com/
HANNAH, R. (2013). The effect of classroom environment on student learning. Western
Michigan University. December.
HYMES, D. (1992). The concept of communicative competence revisited. In: (Thirty years of
linguistic evolution: Studies in honor of René Dirven). University of Virginia.
Charlottesville
JARDINE, W. (2006). Piaget & Education. Peter Lang Publishing. New York.
KRASHEN, S & TERREL, T. (1983). The Natural Approach, Language Acquisition in the
Classroom. Alemany Press.
LEMETYINEN, H. (2012). Language Acquisition. Retreived from:
www.simplypsychology.org/language.html
MINISTERIO DE EDUCACIÓN NACIONAL. (2015) Estándares básicos de competencias
en lenguas extranjeras: inglés.
PALADINES, D. (2010). The role of children music videos in English learning for increasing
the vocabulary in 102 students at San Jose de Castilla School. Universidad Pedagógica
Nacional.
PÉREZ, F. (2012). El análisis concreto en el lenguaje: una apuesta para mitigar la brecha
conceptual de la culturización en la escuela. Universidad Pedagógica Nacional.
PERLMUTTER, D (1968). Deep and Surface Structure contraints in syntax. (Doctoral
dissertation, Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
PIAGET, J. et al. (1971). Mental imagery in the child: A study of development of imaginal
representation. Routledge, Taylor & Francis group. Reprinted of the 1971 edition.
PINTO, D. (2012). The video as an audiovisual tool that allows to develop listening and
speaking skills by increasing vocabulary in students of 202 grade at Prado Veraniego
School. Universidad Pedagógica Nacional.
RAHMANTIAN R. (2011). The effectiveness of audio and video documents in developing
listening comprehension skill in a foreign language. Canadian center of Science and
Education.
RICHARDS, J. & RENANDYA, W. (2008). Methodology in Language Teaching. An
anthology of current practice. Cambridge University Press.
RICHMOND, P.G. (2006). An introduction to Piaget. Routledge, Taylor & Francis group.
SAGOR, R. (2000). Guiding school improvement with action research. Association for
Supervision and Curriculum Development.
SECRETARÍA de educación de Bogotá. Reorganización curricular por ciclos. Referentes
conceptuales y metodológicos. Segunda edición
SCHRAW, G., FLOWERDAY, T. & LEHMAN, S. (2001). Educational Psychology Review.
Vol. 3 N° 13
SPRATT, M., PULVERNESS, A. &WILLIAMS, M. (2015). The TKT (teaching knowledge
test) course. Modules 1, 2 and 3.
SWARBRICK, Anne. Teaching modern languages. The Open University. 2002
TURNER, J. & PATRICK, H. (2004). Motivational Influences on Student Participation in
Classroom Learning Activities, Volume 106, Number 9. Teachers College Record
Columbia University.
WALLACE, M. (1998). Action Research for Language Teachers. Cambridge University
Press.
WINITZ, H. (1981). The Comprehension Approach to Foreign Language Instruction.
Newbury House Publishers. Massachusetts.
4. Contenidos
Esta monografía está dividida en seis apartados como se describe a continuación
Capítulo I: descripción y caracterización.
En este capítulo se hace el diagnóstico y la contextualización de la población y de la
institución, así como el proceso que se llevará a cabo para identificar el problema, plantear los
objetivos y su justificación.
Capítulo II: estudio bibliográfico.
Donde se hace un acercamiento a las fuentes teóricas que soportan la investigación así como
los estudios previos que dan indicios de la implementación de métodos como el de respuesta
física total y las canciones en video para potenciar habilidades de escucha.
Capítulo III: metodología
En este apartado se presenta el diseño metodológico, los instrumentos de recolección de datos
así como la descripción del tipo de investigación que se va a aplicar, una breve descripción de
las actividades y de las unidades de análisis.
Capítulo IV: propuesta pedagógica.
Aquí se expone la propuesta para desarrollar la intervención, y los pasos a seguir durante este
proceso así como un cronograma detallado de implementación.
Capítulo V: análisis de datos
En este capítulo se presenta la interpretación de los datos, las categorías de análisis establecidas
para el tratamiento de los datos y la matriz de análisis a partir de la cual se tabuló la
información.
Capítulo VI: consideraciones finales
Finaliza la monografía con los resultados, conclusiones, recomendaciones, referencias
bibliográficas y anexos.
5. Metodología
Esta investigación se desarrolló bajo los principios de la investigación acción, tomando como
población el primer grado de básica primaria del Colegio I.E.D. Prado Veraniego en la jornada
de la mañana. Se estructuró de manera tal que a través de un diagnóstico se pudiera diseñar un
plan de acción que permitiera hacer cambios significativos en el proceso de enseñanza-
aprendizaje de los estudiantes. Los instrumentos utilizados para la recolección de datos fueron
los trabajos de los estudiantes, los diarios de campo y los videos grabados durante las
intervenciones, con el fin de encontrar si los estudiantes lograban seguir instrucciones,
responder de manera verbal o no verbal a los enunciados y si de igual manera, fomentando el
interés, la participación y la interacción se mejoraba el ambiente de aprendizaje en el salón de
clases.
6. Conclusiones
Durante la implementación de esta investigación se demostró que los estudiantes lograron
alcanzar los objetivos presentados para la intervención. Todo esto gracias a la utilización de las
canciones en video y el método de respuesta física total que permitió generar un ambiente más
propicio para el aprendizaje de la lengua extranjera así como la adquisición de nuevo
vocabulario y la habilidad para comprender enunciados simples o comandos básicos utilizados
con mucha frecuencia dentro del aula de clase.
El interés, la participación y la interacción entre los estudiantes fueron elementos que se
promovieron y a su vez favorecieron el desarrollo de la clase y el proceso de enseñanza-
aprendizaje así como la ejecución del lenguaje hablado que se vuelve más efectivo cuando se
traslada al material concreto y se acompaña con expresiones faciales y no verbales.
Elaborado por: Silvia Alicia Venegas Pinilla
Revisado por: Jairo Rincón
Fecha de elaboración del resumen 24 04 2017
TABLE OF CONTENTS
CHAPTER I ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1
1.1 DESCRIPTION AND CHARACTERIZATION ---------------------------------------------------1
PEI-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------2
MISSION ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------2
VISION -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------3
CYCLES ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------3
1.2 DESCRIPTION OF THE POPULATION -----------------------------------------------------------4
1.3 DESCRIPTION OF THE PROBLEM ----------------------------------------------------------------5
1.4 DIAGNOSIS ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------8
1.5 STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM ------------------------------------------------------------------9
1.6 RESEARCH QUESTION ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 10
1.7 OBJECTIVES: ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 10
1.8 JUSTIFICATION ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 11
CHAPTER II ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 13
2.1 STATE OF THE ART -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 13
2.2 THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK ------------------------------------------------------------------ 15
2.2.1 CLASS ENVIRONMENT ---------------------------------------------------------------------- 16
2.2.2 SONGS AS A DIDACTIC RESOURCE ----------------------------------------------------- 18
2.2.3 LISTENING SKILLS --------------------------------------------------------------------------- 19
2.2.4 DEFINING TPR ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 21
2.2.5 LANGUAGE ACQUISITION DEVICE ----------------------------------------------------- 25
2.2.6 COGNITIVE PERESPECTIVES -------------------------------------------------------------- 27
CHAPTER III --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 30
METHODOLOGY ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 30
3.1 METHODOLOGICAL DESIGN ------------------------------------------------------------------- 30
3.2 METHOD OF RESEARCH -------------------------------------------------------------------------- 30
3.3 STEPS FOR AN ACTION RESEARCH ----------------------------------------------------------- 32
3.4 INSTRUMENTS -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 34
3.4 POPULATION ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 36
3.5 ETHICAL ISSUES ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 37
3.6 UNITS OF ANALYSIS ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 37
CHAPTER IV -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 39
4.1 PEDAGOGICAL PROPOSAL ---------------------------------------------------------------------- 39
Songs and Rhymes: ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 40
Video songs ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 40
TPR exercises -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 41
CHAPTER V ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 49
5.1 ANALYSIS AND INTERPRETATION OF THE DATA --------------------------------------- 49
Students’ performance ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 51
TPR effectiveness --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 52
Welcoming environment ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 52
5.2 ANALYSIS OF SUBCATEGORIES --------------------------------------------------------------- 53
Indicators: ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 56
5.3 DATA TABULATION AND ANALYSIS -------------------------------------------------------- 63
CHAPTER VI -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 70
FINDINGS ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 70
CONCLUSIONS ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 71
RECOMMENDATIONS --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 73
REFERENCES ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 75
ANNEXES ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 79
TABLE OF CHARTS, GRAPHS AND ANNEXES
CHART N° 1 CYCLES 4
CHART N° 2 ACTIVITIES DESCRIPTION 35
CHART N° 3 IMPLEMENTATION CHRONOGRAM 44
CHART N° 4 ANALYSIS CATEGORIES 50
CHART N° 5 ANALYSIS MATRIX 53
CHART N° 6 QUALITATIVE ANALYSIS 58
GRAPH N°1 INDICATORS 64
GRAPH N° 2 PERFORMANCE OF STUDENTS PER ACTIVITY 65
GRAPH N° 3 PERFORMANCE OF EACH STUDENT PER ACTIVITY 66
GRAPH N° 4 VOCABULARY ACQUISITION 68
ANNEX 1(SURVEY) 79
ANNEX 2 (DIAGNOSIS TEST) 80
ANNEX 3 (CONSENT FORM) 80
ANNEX 4 (TRANSCRIPT INTERVENTION N° 8) 81
ANNEX N° 5 PHOTOGRAPHS OF THE NECKLACE ACTIVITY 89
ANNEX N° 6 PHOTOGRAPHS OF FISHING ACTIVITY 90
ANNEX 7 (PHOTOGRAPHS OF CLASS ROUTINES “HELLO SONG” AND PRAYER.) 91
CHAPTER I
1.1 DESCRIPTION AND CHARACTERIZATION
The school where this monograph was carried out is I.E.D. PRADO VERANIEGO SEDE B,
where only elementary students attend. This is a public school located in Suba, the eleventh
locality of Bogota which is part of the northwestern sector of the city. Setting on the center part
of the neighborhood, the school holds students who belong to different social strata, mainly two
and three. Next to the school there is the Prado Veraniego CAMI which is the principal medical
center of the zone.
To go deeper in the contextualization of the external environment of the school, it is worth
stressing to underline the contribution of the school to the educational environment of the
neighborhood, since there are some concentrations of hazard and lack of education in children.
Due to a sewage canal which is a source of insecurity and drug sale. In this sense, the presence of
the school regulates these dynamics and improves the quality of life of the current and future
residents of the zone. It is worth remarking that the zone has a small library with internet
connection and also offers different courses to the community, due to this matter, students and
their families can strengthen the academic processes of the students as well as their interest for
knowledge and learning, in a different space out of the classroom.
An important feature of the school is that two shifts attends per day. Morning and afternoon of
mixed-gender students, and it is part of the calendar A: This designation is referred to the school
year which starts in mid-January and ends in mid- November approximately. In the school,
learners have a classroom with computers which they use once per week during their informatics
classes. Even so, this classroom can be used for English classes, allowing the teacher to have
more didactic resources such as internet pages, videos, movies or online activities to reinforce the
learning process and improve the interest learners may have in the English class.
There is also a central playground where learners can play during the break they have late in the
school day. It is possible to find classrooms with enough light and space to receive the average of
35 students per class, as well as storage cabinets where they stock up different didactic materials
for the classes. If necessary, it is possible to have classes in a multiple use room and the
informatics room with prior request. This room is available for the English class which represents
an extra resource for the L2 class.
PEI
The school has got a behavior manual which presents to the educational community the PEI, the
vision and mission of the institution so students and families can help with the educational
purposes proposed by the school. This institutional project premise, “quality education towards
human development” pursues the integral development of the individuals, based on moral and
social values together with scientific and logical knowledge. This ensures that students will not
only be formed in formal knowledge but also as individuals who are part of a society.
MISSION
On the basis of the above, the mission of the school aims at generate and establish cognitive,
social and practical processes focused on training competent human beings through a quality
communication that allows the appropriation of moral values to construct a healthful social
harmony.
VISION
The vision of the school is directed to maintain their scholars studying so they can lead social
transforming processes as well as contribute, not only to the society, but to the nation itself.
CYCLES
This institution also works with a curriculum based on cycles proposed by the: Ministerio de
Educación Nacional which contains four main components: availability, access, permanence and
relevance. These all based on the premise of assuring the completion of the learning process and
the importance of responding to the needs of the community. These cycles are five, all articulated
and developed during the schooling period with the purpose to avoid isolate learnings during the
process.
With this basis, it is possible to determine the pertinence of the PEI made by each school self-
contained design. Thus, the proposal of cycles aims at form an individual not only skillful on
answering national tests but also learners with values and principles who can contribute to the
society. In this sense, the family is a crucial part of the proposal since it is the nucleus where
children may be formed as individuals. The cycles are explained in the next chart presented in the
educative policies of curricular reorganization.
CHART N° 1 CYCLES
Cycles First Second Third Fourth Fifth
Imprint cycle childhood
and subject
construction
body,
creativity
and culture
social interaction
and constitution
of possible
worlds
Life project professional
and job
development
Axes of
development
stimulation
and
exploration
discovery
and
experience
inquiry and
experimentation
vocation and
professional
exploration
investigation
and
developing of
the job culture
Grades preschool, 1°
and 2°
3° and 4° 5° 6° and 7° 8° and 9° 10° and 11°
Ages 3 to 8 years
old
8 to
10 years
old
10 to 12 years old 12 to 15
years old
15 to 17 years
old.
In this regard, learners chosen to carry out this pedagogical intervention are part of the first cycle,
where the proposal of curricular reorganization makes emphasis on the stimulation and
exploration of knowledge and abilities. Thus, the approach to the foreign language should be
attractive and motivating to students.
1.2 DESCRIPTION OF THE POPULATION
First elementary graders are the participants chosen to carry out the proposal for this pedagogical
intervention. The 101 level counts with 34 students, 23 of them are boys and 11 are girls, ranging
in ages from 5 to 7 years. There is not such an important intercultural interaction among them
within the classroom, since all the children are born and raised in this city, however, some of the
parents or families of the students are born and raised in other cities that they visit during
holidays.
According to findings from a demographic survey applied to the group (ANNEX 1), most of their
families are formed by the mother, the father and siblings, other 34% by mother and siblings and
in 70% of the cases, the students spend the afternoon, after the school day with a person different
from their mother or father. 70% of the students also do their homework with the help of an adult,
15% with the help of a big brother and 15% do it by themselves with any kind of help.
The survey also aims at inquire about the relationship between learners and their families, the
learning processes they have outside the school and the knowledge they may have of the foreign
language. However, according to the national education board, the students under first grade do
not receive English lessons or any kind of formal approach to a foreign language. That is why the
diagnosis test (described below) does not make emphasis on the language level of the learners but
in their interests, social abilities and expectations toward the class.
It was also possible to find that learners like to watch TV cartoons and movies. They prefer to
watch them in Spanish but if the spoken language is English, they do not lose interest due to the
images, songs, colors, and movement. In general, they respond to the visual elements of the
cartoons. In this sense, the way the children spend their free time determines their worldview,
topics of conversation among them and preferences when using certain terms words and
expressions in their mother tongue. Interactions with other children during their free time at home
are not significant since they watch a lot of TV which in turns, is a considerable influence to the
children in respect of their role models.
1.3 DESCRIPTION OF THE PROBLEM
According to observations, the group does not have any approach to the foreign language, due to
the lack of English classes during their preschool years. Nevertheless, few of them have an idea
of certain English words which is not enough to comprehend a basic command, an instruction or
a simple statement. In the primary school they do not have an English teacher.
For this reason, the school has an agreement with Universidad Pedagógica Nacional to support
the learning processes of the learners in this area. When it is not possible to have interns form the
university, the head teacher takes the class with not enough basis regarding to the teaching of a
foreign language; following a frequency of two hours per week for this class.
About this concern, the Ministerio de Educación Nacional (Estándares básicos de competencias,
2006), established a National Bilingual Program with the purpose of increasing the standard
learning of a foreign language in the education system which is the reason why the
implementation of an English curriculum is mandatory since first grade (Ministerio de Educación
Nacional 2015)
Following instructions is a major problem for the children, since they are conditioned to listen to
them out loud (better shouted) and in mother tongue. There is also a lack of consciousness about
their learning processes with respect to all the academic activities and they give a minor
importance to the knowledge they may acquire during their school years for their future life. It is
imperative to start a motivational process where scholars may find the learning of a new language
useful, as well as to improve the relationships and interactions with their peers having new
linguistic elements to interact.
It is also important to point out that many linguistic processes involving language such as
instruction following, basic performance, attention, memory and accurate verbal interaction that
should be already developed in mother tongue, are not completely achieved; this affirmation is
possible due to the mentioned discoveries.
In this case it should be noted that scholars are in the pre-operational knowledge stage of
cognitive development proposed by Piaget (1971) - (Approximately 2-7 years of age). At this
point, spoken language is improving, an aspect that is not evolving effectively in the target group.
Language improvement is a must, considering that this is the principal child's tool to comprehend
and explore the world. At this stage, as it is mentioned by Jardine (2006) “the wonderful sounds
of language are linked in the life of the child to the giggly, age-old allure of rhymes, poems and
nonsense” (p.57). Thereby, children are not clear to speak and express their thoughts, points of
view and necessities using oral expressions.
Likewise, the use of images is an important feature on this stage of development. Until this point
of research, children have greater ability to classify objects according to their size, form or color.
“When the child uses the verbal sign as medium of expression, the image acts as an individual
sign which supports the verbal sign. It is part of the assimilation of the reality for a child”.
(Richmond, 2006) thus, the use of images to make an approach to a foreign language plays an
important role being a tool to avoid translation.
“The image will be seen either as fulfilling an essential function in acts of cognition, or as
playing a primarily symbolic role” (Piaget, 1971). In this sense, it is important to take advantage
from this visual ability and readiness in order to propose a pedagogical intervention. A method or
a strategy involving imagery, would be an effective discourse to set primary receptive skills.
1.4 DIAGNOSIS
Regarding these statements, a diagnosis test was applied during three weeks to find strengths and
weaknesses to the proposed activities. Speaking, listening abilities and vocabulary related to the
learner context were set in the diagnosis in order to find how learners may perceive and follow
instructions through listening. “How well we listen has a great impact on how we resolve
conflict, lead teams and build relationships” (Downs, 2008).
This test was designed taking into account the national basic standards for foreign language
established for first elementary, making an emphasis on the use of images, activities supported by
technological resources and videos to seize the learners’ attention and create an environment of
awareness environment in order to facilitate their first formal approach to the foreign language.
The activities were designed in order to identify the response and interest of the learners when
listening to an instruction, statement or a song in English, the interest of the children was
notorious and almost immediately, they tried to reproduce the sounds as well as the movements
that accompany the rhyme or the song.
The activities proposed in this diagnosis test were based on the listening ability where students
just had to recognize the onomatopoeia of an animal sound, this because it is possible to find if
students can relate images and sounds even if they do not know how to pronounce the uttered
animal. The students first watched a video where the animals appeared making their sounds
(onomatopoeia), after watching the video, a paper with animal images was given to the students,
in this, they had to circle the sound they could recognize as onomatopoeia of an animal (Annex
1).
The objective of this test using onomatopoeias was to evaluate if the students were able to
recognize global sounds with certain nuances of the phonemes, proper of the English language. In
such way, students could be able to recognize more efficiently words and complete statements
using a foreign language.
The result of this diagnosis was an evident lack of approach to the foreign language since 34% of
the students were not able to identify any sound and only 5% of them detected the sound and
circled the right animal; the 61% remaining were able to identify only one or two sounds out of
the three required.
1.4 STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM
As stated in the previous phases of this research, it was possible to establish an issue, taking into
account the observations and the diagnosis test applied, the population and their performance in a
foreign language environment. The result is a lack of a formal process in the EFL learning due to
the absence of English lessons during the preschool years. In this regard and according to the
national education law, it is mandatory to start the process with first grade students developing
the initial education in a foreign language, overcoming the lack of language exposure and setting
principles to build foundational skills.
Consequently, this research proposal does not aim at intervene any academic issue but to foster
and develop the learning process of the English language, majorly directed to intervene listening
skills. Hence, to generate a meaningful context which facilitates the language learning and
provide an important percentage of foundational skills of the group, the activities will be based
on the close reality of the learner, such as his/her family, own body or things he/she sees or
interacts daily in order to make the knowledge of a foreign language something useful and
meaningful.
Moreover, it is remarkable that the first approach to English as a foreign language should be
given through listening, being this ability the principal basis to acquire the other language
competences (speaking, reading and writing). “Through reception, we internalize linguistic
information without which we could not produce language” (Brown, 2000).
In addition, in this first approach, the interests of the learners should be taken into account. Also
the topics and the way they are willing to learn. Thus, the use of images, songs, rhymes and
movements is imperative to reach the expected results. The types of activities are justified by the
age, children’s background and learning necessities described in the problem.
1.6 RESEARCH QUESTION
How can the use of video songs be an instrument to create a significant class environment when
fostering EFL listening skills in first grade students at Prado Veraniego School?
1.7 OBJECTIVES
General
● To establish how the listening skills in first grade students at Prado Veraniego school can
be fostered by using video songs in EFL class.
Specific
● To analyze the capacity of listening in the students within the English class in order to
encourage them to improve the recognition of language patterns and basic commands as
well as nonverbal performance of enounced statements.
● To describe a way in which TPR method could help students’ comprehension of a foreign
language.
● To evaluate if students acquire vocabulary through listening and to what extent.
● To identify how the video songs contribute to create a welcoming environment in an EFL
classroom.
1.8 JUSTIFICATION
The purpose of this research is to identify the way how listening skills can be developed and
strengthened in first grade students at Prado Veraniego School. In this sense, it is important to
take into account that the learners have not had any English class or approach to the second
language, which is why it is necessary to generate an appealing environment to begin the process.
The technological resources like songs with videos, as well as the body movement activities can
be more attractive for the children so they be more interested and participative in their own
learning processes. Thus, this intervention looks for a motivational experience to start the English
lessons, taking into consideration the age of the participants in this research, their level of
cognitive development and their behavior issues.
It is important for the students to develop listening skills by using this method where they can
comprehend basic commands and orders as well as obey them. Listening is a receptive skill
which is going to enhance readiness and stimulate LAD. Also is a foundational skill, necessary
for cognitive processes and thinking skills related to language. Having the students to achieve
listening skills through the use of TPR and songs is the most effective way for the teacher to
verify if the concepts or the knowledge worked in the classroom are being acquired, as well as an
advantage for children and teachers since it is the most effective way to learn a language at this
age.
The TPR method as well as the rhymes and songs allow the students to acquire the language
with other characteristic elements of the language, as the nonverbal component, the sonority,
rhyme and rhythm of the songs which is essential when talking about the comprehension and
apprehension of the language. Also creating an appropriate learning environment as well as
making the learning meaningful and noteworthy for the learners.
It should be noted that this proposal is intended to allow the students to find a concrete use for the
language learning and the thematic are focused on the use of a real context where they can
understand the language as something familiar that may be part of their daily life and draw them
to meaningful experiences.
CHAPTER II
LITERATURE REVIEW
2.1 STATE OF THE ART
In this stage of the research three previous studies are going to be exposed which will help to
identify the type of interventions worked in similar population of students and in similar
cognitive conditions.
The first study is: The role of children music videos in English learning for increasing the
vocabulary in 102 students at San Jose de Castilla School. (Paladines, 2010) This research aims
to increase the vocabulary and it allows to notice that lack of attention is a common issue in
learners of first elementary. In this sense, the main issue found in this research was the lack of
attention as well as the short memory and comprehension of the vocabulary presented to the
students.
The implementation of this proposal had as a result, an increase in the focus of attention of the
students concluding that videos are a useful tool to catch students’ attention. In addition, the use
of images in the videos helped the students to construct meaning without necessity of any
translation or definition of the concept.
The contribution of this study to the present research is very significant, since part of the process
is to motivate and create a meaningful environment in the students as well as create a pleasant
learning environment to the English learning process that students are starting at this point.
A second study is: The video as an audiovisual tool that allows to develop listening and speaking
skills by increasing vocabulary in students of 202 grade at Prado Veraniego School. (Pinto,
2012). This study contributes to the present proposal because it is focused on the developing of
listening skills and uses the video as the main resource.
This research found that students have a highlighted preference for the videos as well as the
songs which was crucial to develop the attention and motivation in the students when trying to
comprehend or understand something in another language. In this sense, it is important to
mention that the population of this research are children between six and seven years old and the
place where it was carried out is the same institution where is developed the present proposal,
which gives an idea of the preferences or interests of the population intervened.
The third study is: The video as a technological resource that allows the design of adequate
material to initiate learning processes in EFL for first grade students of Prado Veraniego School.
(Cruz, 2014) It shows how the use of videos and songs help children to develop a major interest
in the English class in first grade which is their first approach to the foreign language. The
students also developed a particular interest in the TV shows or videos that they commonly see in
their free time.
In this study, the researcher designed study material based on the content of the videos, which
permits to have a different perspective of the material becoming a tool more than an element of
entertainment. It was found that even though students may have learnt a song in Spanish it is
possible for them to learn the same song in English as well as new songs presented that were
recognized for the children due to the music. It is also remarkable that students have remembered
better the images than the words which is a clear indicator of the importance of the visual
memory in the learning process. In this regard, students may be experiencing a successful
learning-English process when they are exposed to these two elements.
Another study that helped on this research was: The short story used as an online tool that
provides meaningful contexts to develop English listening and speaking skills in EFL first grade
students at Prado Veraniego School. This research found how it is possible to introduce EFL in
first grade students through technological resources. In this sense, images and videos are
important resources to make the input of language, helping children to understand a sequence or
the general idea of a story without the need of translation or use of the mother tongue. At the
same time, the researcher chose familiar themes to help students relate the contents with their
previous knowledge.
As a result of this, students were able to repeat what they were listening, establishing a
communicative environment where they could state the new vocabulary and the acquired
knowledge.
2.2 THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK
To develop this research, it is important to take into consideration some theoretical approaches
that will support the proposal established in the present document. In the first instance, the
importance of the class environment will be held and the video songs through Total Physical
Response as the language teaching method to be applied, in order to develop the listening skills
in students.
2.2.1 CLASS ENVIRONMENT
Attending Vygotsky’s theory about social learning, it could be said that the environment of the
classroom has the advantage that it may affect the mood of the whole class, not only of some
students, in this regard, it may determine if the teacher can take control of the class or not and if
the developing of the contents will be successful and timely. To find out how the environment of
a classroom influences the acquisition or appropriation of knowledge is significant to understand
that children spend most of their day in those places, thus, it is imperative to give the classroom
the importance it has. From the way the desks are aligned to the attitude the teacher has within
the class, everything will affect the emotions, the motivation and the disposition of the student to
the contents or thematic of the lesson.
As it is mentioned by Hannah (2013) “If schools really do play a large role in teaching the next
generation how to be successful members of society then every precaution should be taken to
make sure that the learning environment is one that helps students thrive”. According to this, the
motivation for knowledge and learning does not grow autonomously but with a welcoming class
environment and it can make a remarkable difference in the way how students assume their role
and actively participate in their own learning process. Therefore, the class environment provides
an emotional component, important for knowledge acquisition. This component is based on
positive communicative relationships, clear group objectives and a collective common language.
In this sense, class environment is going to determine the effectiveness of this project proposal.
According to a preschool teacher consulted by the researcher (Pérez, 2017), experienced in young
learners processes, the class environment is an aspect to recall. He defines the physical display as
the organization of the set of supplies and resources. The distribution of those, would certainly
determine the group's planning, method and performance, as the physical space is a concrete
system of our minds. In this regard, the students who participate in this proposal can be
motivated since the beginning of the EFL process making it a more pleasant experience as well as
facilitating to the teacher the developing of the lesson.
However, in the circumstances of this research and due to the presence of different groups in the
same classroom, it is not possible to make significant changes in the physical environment, but
only a few wall decorations that are susceptible of being damaged by other students; nevertheless,
there are other elements such as the energy of the teacher, the materials used within the class and
the developed activities which creates a welcoming environment to the students and benefits the
attitude of the learners towards the class.
The nonverbal component can be considered as the beginning of the communicative process
when attempting to start a dialogue or an interchange of ideas in an unknown language. This
because the student, due to the lack of comprehension of the oral code will find a way to
understand or express desires, thoughts and necessities and he will be doing it through the only
resource he has at the moment which is the nonverbal component.
2.2.2 SONGS AS A DIDACTIC RESOURCE
To enhance the theory that supports this research, it is relevant to address the songs with videos
as didactic resources when teaching a foreign language, in this sense, it should be mentioned that
the use of songs and videos within an English class has strengthened during the 1960’s decade,
authors like Bartle (1962), Richards (1969) and Jolly (1975) mentioned the linguistic benefits of
using music since it generates an additional interest in learners.
Music was implemented in the audio lingual method to reduce the apathy and boredom of
students caused by the constant repetition of definitions and translations. In addition, songs and
music create a different environment in the classroom, with this, learners are more relaxed and
willing to acquire knowledge and it also permits a socio cultural interaction between the students.
As Candlin (1992), in the preface as series editor that Songs in Action (Griffee, 1992) refers:
To be sure, songs have a place in the classroom for helping create that friendly
and co-operative atmosphere so important for language learning, but they can
offer much more. They offer insights into the culture and especially the stories
and myths of different societies, providing a window into the frames of
reference and values of the peoples whose language we are learning (Candlin,
1992).
The emotional aspect is fundamental in an EFL classroom and music develops this aspect helping
children feel more confident when producing new statements or performing nonverbal actions
according to the content of the songs, which in turns, boosts the developing of the curriculum
contents. Moreover, videos are as important as songs in the motivational aspect and contribute to
the intercultural aspect, since learners are closer to the foreign language culture and reality. This
also ensures that the attention of the learner will be focused on the class, catching visual and
audible perceptions.
Related to the listening skill, Rahmantian (2011) affirms that “every individual has their own
listening strategies”. In this sense, there are many purposes a speaker has when listening a
statement or an utterance: apart from hearing, he will be detecting, selecting, identifying,
recognizing, disambiguating, reformulating, synthesizing, doing and judging. (Rahmantian,
2011), all this permeated by the context, the place where the communicative process is given, the
interlocutors and other factors which predetermines the discourse.
2.2.3 LISTENING SKILLS
Listening is the most important ability in communication terms, and the first receptive skill to be
developed when a person is attempting to interchange ideas or thoughts, that is to say, when is
learning a new language (Spratt, Pulverness and Williams, 2015). To make a more assertive
approach to this concept it is necessary to make a difference between the productive and the
receptive skills. Listening and reading are receptive skills and speaking and writing are
productive skills, the former attempts to respond to a language and the latter, as it was said, aims
at the production of statements.
To develop the listening skill it is necessary to take into consideration the communicative context
and the building of sense when interpreting the sounds of the spoken language. It is imperative to
make an approach to the difference between the spoken and written skills. Spratt, Pulverness and
Williams, (2015) agree with the fact that the spoken language is produced less planned and not as
structured as the written language; the same phenomenon is given when listening, the statements
and structures are not as complex as in the written language; this is remarkable because when
children learn a foreign language, they need to identify simplified structures and simple
structured statements. Listening also involves the interpretation of different accents, speeds and
intonations.
For this research it is important to bear in mind those elements and the possible difficulties that
can be presented due to the connected speech, another characteristic of the spoken language in
which “words join together to form a connected stream of sounds” (Spratt, Pulverness and
Williams, 2015). In this case, the teacher should be the mediator and the facilitator to make the
language more understandable and suitable for the students in order to facilitate the development
of this skill and the acquisition of the foreign language.
Listening was underrated when learning a new language and even when learning the mother
tongue because it is assumed that a native speaker has already developed this ability.
Nonetheless, listening has a major influence in the learning process because “if learners are aware
of what they are doing, if they are conscious of the processes underlying the learning they are
involved in, learning will be more effective” (Richards and Renandya, 2008). The development
of this ability will also improve the environment of a classroom and all the communicative
processes given during the teaching-learning process, considering that the students will be more
willing to listen to their peers, their teachers and in general all the speakers around them.
2.2.4 DEFINING TPR (Total Physical Response)
TPR is an English teaching method developed by Dr. James Asher which has been applied for
around 30 years. This method embarks upon encouraging learners to listen and respond to target
spoken language performed by the teacher. TPR attempts to the coordination of speech and
action: teaching language through motor activity. To understand better this postulate Spratt,
Pulverness and Williams (2015) gather the main points of TPR:
View of language: grammatical structures and vocabulary are the most important aspect of
language.
View of language learning:
Learners learn by being exposed to language. Comprehension comes before production.
Learners often need a silent period (a period of time during which learners hear language
rather than produce it, as babies do) to take in language, so they could not be forced to
speak before they are ready.
Language is learnt best when it is accompanied by doing things physically.
Learning takes place when learners a relaxed
Classroom practices
Used mainly with young learners and beginners
The syllabus focuses on grammatical structures and vocabulary involved in giving and
following instructions.
Lessons involve the teacher giving instructions and the learners physically carrying out
instructions in the classroom.
At more advanced stages and after the silent period, learners give one another instruction.
This method (TPR), is conceived as a natural method which aims at imitate the first language
acquisition. Asher argues that the second language learning should be subordinated to the first
language learning natural conditions. In the 1960’s and 1970’s researches gave importance to the
hypothesis that language learning should start first with understanding and then with production
(Winitz, 1981).
Winitz (1981) also mentions that emphasis of TPR is placed on students who are developing
basic communication skills and vocabulary through meaningful exposure to the target language.
They listen to the teacher that, at the same time, is using language in a communicative way. The
students do not speak at the beginning, the teacher helps students to understand him/her by using
pictures and occasional words in their native language and by being as expressive as possible.
Asher (as referenced by Larsen-Freeman, Anderson 2000) supports three main processes:
1. First, the children develop listening competence, then they develop the ability to speak.
During the first phases of first language acquisition, they are able to comprehend basic
and complex verbalizations which they can't produce or reproduce. Asher supports that in
that first process children make mental schemes that later will be able to produce during
the speaking phase.
2. Children’s listening comprehension ability is developed because they need to respond
physically to parental forms.
3. After founding listening comprehension basis, speech evolves fluently
An overview of TPR principles is settled by Larsen-Freeman (2000). Here is a quick
display:
Meaning often conveys with actions.
Students can initially learn one part of language using their bodies (the researcher relates
this to superficial structure mentioned in LAD explanation)
The importance of imperative
Understanding before speaking
The students learn through observing actions as well as by performing the actions after
modeling.
Correction should be carried out in an unobtrusive manner.
Motivation: when students feel successful, low anxiety facilitate learning. Novelty is also
motivating.
Students are expected to make some errors
The teacher is the director of children’s behavior.
Two simultaneous phases: modeling-opportunity of showing understanding
Language is introduced in L1
Assessment: “Teachers will know immediately whether or not students understand by
observing their students’ actions. Formal evaluation can be conducted simply by
commanding individual students to perform a series of actions” (Larsen-Freeman, 2000,
p.115)
Consequently, Asher believes that foreign language should be learnt upon the mother tongue. So
TPR method is designed taking into account first language processes. “In this respect, TPR
considers that one learns best when he is actively involved and grasp what he hears” (Larsen-
Freeman, 2000).
Furthermore, Asher (1983) points that TPR method and techniques are mainly based on
motivation and it is mostly presented as a powerful approach in terms of learning effectiveness.
Therefore, TPR is not only a TESL method itself; it better carries a cluster of motivational
implications: helping students to feel relaxed more than anything, because they perceive
familiarity towards understanding and producing statements or single language elements
(vocabulary or propositions).
In this concern, and considering that this is the first approximation to the language of these
students, it should be a meaningful experience, TPR is the most appropriate method to use for
carrying out this proposal. The previous statements are reinforced by Krashen and Terrel (1983).
The former author aims at point out that it is better for students to learn meaningfully through a
closer language activity. This suggests to arouse natural situations among learners which will
mandatory lead to interaction, and that is a plus onto social learning. This is also connected with
the natural approach proposed by Terrell, who decidedly recommends TPR method as a gear of
natural language.
TPR attempts to highlight motivation through a decisive aspect: modeling. Albert Bandura
(2009) developed such a huge theory of modeling, supported by an imitation-learning-
performing scheme on children: exactly what TPR suggests. In the application of TPR, imitation
would set everything related to listening skills and performing through production by modeling
which could be considered as the motivational aspect. In this case, modeling leads to learning by
doing and meaningful learning. In all cases, the teacher should decide and evaluate which stage is
going to be developed.
2.2.5 LANGUAGE ACQUISITION DEVICE
The Language Acquisition Device (LAD) is defined by Noam Chomsky as a “hypothetical tool
hardwired into the brain that helps children rapidly learn and understand any language” Chomsky
(as referenced by instructor Andrew Diamond 2017). Following the previous hint, Chomsky
clarifies LAD as a predetermined structure, ready to adapt to any language structure, especially in
terms of its syntax and grammar. This affirmation suggests that a child will reproduce his mother
tongue making mistakes at the beginning but these mistakes will never include a deep structure
inaccuracy that is to say that a child is able to learn any language with a specific structure.
In this sense, the concept of deep structure refers to “well-formedness conditions on generalized
phrase markers which apply prior to the application of transformations” (Perlmutter, 1968). In
contrast, “surface structures constraint acts as a filter and rejects as ungrammatical…”
(Perlmutter, 1968). Observing this, deep structure refers to a system of primary units of language,
settled in order to organize logical sentences. While surface structure deals with isolated
components of language with certain sense but meaningless in terms of syntax: “ungrammatical”
Perlmutter (1968). This main difference is explained by the author throughout this abstract:
“…The problem of generalized phrase markers generated by the base
component which underlie no well-formed sentences, and the kinds of
grammatical devices that are needed to characterize such sentences as
ungrammatical. It is shown here that the grammars must include deep structure
constraints or well-formedness conditions on the output of the transformational
component. The implications of the availability of these filtering devices for
the power of grammars are briefly discussed.” (Perlmutter, 1968, p. 1)
This is mentioned to back up the idea that superficial structure is built within young
learners’ appropriation of initial language: a sense construction through elementary
structures.
Chomsky also makes clear that there is not a special section in the brain where LAD is settled, or
any switch that is turn on automatically in order to learn any language. LAD aims at explain how
thousands of processes that happen in humans’ brain, contribute to form a perfect operation that
allows a child be ready to learn any language rapidly.
As reported by Diamond (2017) Chomsky developed the concept of LAD in the 1950’s, and how
he has moved on to a greater theory called Universal Grammar (UG), to illustrate and recall the
rapid linguistic development in human beings. LAD later evolved into UG. In this analysis,
Diamond (2017) explains how the Universal Grammar postulates that any native speaker knows
things and elements of his mother tongue without a specific modeling or imitation because that
does not come from the concrete experience of the subject or their experience, but comes from
the individual’s mind In this abstract, Diamond (2017) also explains how Chomsky proposed that
every child was born with a LAD, which holds the fundamental rules for language, in other
words, children are born with an understanding of the rules of language; they simply need to
acquire the vocabulary. Chomsky provides a bunch of evidence to support his theory. He states
that languages around the world are very similar. Every language has something that is like a
noun or a verb, or every language has the ability to make things positive or negative and every
language has consonants and vowels, in such a way, the process of learning grammatical
structures becomes unconscious.
Chomsky also discovered that when children are learning to speak, they use specific grammatical
elements in every sentence (no matter if this sentence is disorganized or wrongly displayed) has a
subject and a verb that no early speaker omits or confounds. This process is given through
imitation, which means that the acquisition of the mother tongue is detached from the acquisition
of knowledge, thus, and according to Chomsky, by the age of five or six a child is able to become
fluent in his mother tongue regardless of his scholarly or intellectual development.
The child also takes notice of the intonation, the pitch and other variations such as duration,
rhythm and facial expressions (when it is possible); this to identify grammatical patterns,
sequences and communicative intentions of the speaker which in turn, allows the children to
build a more structured discourse and grants a successful communicative process.
2.2.6 COGNITIVE PERESPECTIVES
It is important for this project to gather useful cognitive perspectives in order to understand how
young learners learn and interact with language. For this purpose, some useful data is presented
that complements the proposed intervention. First, it is necessary to establish in which manner
students of the target ages learn, not only the language, but the way how they think and act.
According to learning theories in general, such as Piaget’s or Bruner’s, children do learn by
concrete process and direct representation. But the most suitable theory linking to TPR, is
Bandura’s which also complements the natural method concept of Chomsky’s LAD.
Bandura (1971), proposes the Social Theory of Learning, centered on reinforcement and
observation. He supports that human beings acquire abilities and conducts through an
instrumental mode, built by imitation and observation. In children, those two processes are given
by models: parents, educators, friends, TV heroes and so on.
In agreement with Perez (2012), the imitation is displayed by the following factors:
-By instinct: an impulsive instinct is awaken through observed actions.
-By development: action imitation by kids are adjusted to mind structures.
-By conditioning: imitated and reinforced conducts by molding.
-Instrumental conduct: imitation with consequences, showing secondary impulses in order to
reach the great models.
These findings lead Bandura to develop an observational theory in which he establishes that
children acquire new conducts reinforced by language and gestures. They are implicit and silent,
until they have the opportunity to demonstrate knowledge (this is related to the silent period in
TRP). Children learn directly and indirectly (vicarious learning) through observation and
representation.
There are four stages of observation: attention, detainment, production and motivation.
Afterwards, this knowledge is transferred to other situations out of the individual. Here is where
children learn to draw, write, talk… (Schraw et al. 2001)
And when knowledge is transferred, many processes have to occur in order to translate proper
actions into visible knowledge. Here is when the first thinking processes are ready to happen.
That’s why it was a priority to research which processes are engaged in this “second” stage of
children learning. It is well known that those processes are classified into thinking skills, the core
of the understanding of intellect. Bloom’s taxonomy (1956) is one the most accurate approach to
thinking skills.
CHAPTER III
METHODOLOGY
3.1 METHODOLOGICAL DESIGN
Along this chapter, action research is going to be described as is the type of research applied in
this proposal. The procedures that will be presented are going to be used in order to respond to
the research question. Therefore, it is important to display the instruments designed to collect
data and the way how this data will be analyzed, as well as the time intended to the observation
of the group and the corresponding pedagogical intervention.
3.2 METHOD OF RESEARCH
Transformation: proposal of intervention in IED Prado Veraniego
The type of research used in this proposal could be described as an approximation to
transformation, (Wallace, 1998), since it takes part of a human process such as education, this is
the method used when boarding educational issues considering that it allows to understand and
intervene problems presented in a classroom. As an active member of the research system, the
basic purpose is to identify issues in the teaching-learning process and be able to surpass or
improve upon them. This allows teachers and students to increase the class development of the
students and identify the circumstances where this process is boosted or by the contrary is getting
downward.
This method also takes into account all the agents involved in the teaching-learning process,
understanding students as agents, the teacher and his/her development within the classroom and
the physical environment of the school. These elements are going to be taken into account before
starting to collect all the data as well as during the analysis of the information.
One of the characteristics of the action research is that it is based on a problem to solve,
according to Wallace (1998), “this (action research) nearly arises from some specific problem or
issue arising out of our professional practice”. As the problem was identified, developing an
intervention becomes essential. This method is accurate to the kind of approach that was selected
to implement a pedagogical internship. Consequently, it is necessary to state that it is possible to
encourage an active role through new methodologies, supported by a broad theoretical
background.
Wallace (1998) mentions that action research is an important chunk of inquiry, which “means
answering questions by using various kinds of evidences” and reflecting on these questions and
evidences is how it is possible to answer the questions and issues in regards to the pedagogical
problem presented in the school.
The idea of “reflecting” on the questions refers to a “reflective cycle” (Wallace, 1998) where “the
process can be repeated reframing to the problem, collecting fresh data until we have found a
solution that satisfies us”. The reflective cycle is evidenced in this research for the reason that
there are some language variables which cannot be avoided: oral production, vocabulary and
listening skills, which in turn, are the core of the problem itself. But beyond, there are many
aspects (secondary variables) that contribute to understand the main problem and its intervention
such as the thinking processes of the students, extra-linguistic patterns, nonverbal communication
or even transversal categories (types of learning, social interaction, context variations).
Those are clear signs that the context demands a more complex research, more inductive that lead
the researcher to identify singular features of the population, with both qualitative and
quantitative interpretations. Action research uses universal postulates in order to achieve
progression among local necessities. It allows the researcher to analyze data under an
interdisciplinary approach in order to support the intervention.
3.3 STEPS FOR AN ACTION RESEARCH
Focus: readiness and foundational skills
For this kind of research there are some strategies that need to be considered to show how it can
be developed. First of all, it is necessary to select a focus, in this regard, (Sagor, 2000) explains
that, despite of the numerous questions a teacher may have, it is important to focus on a specific
concern since it may avoid false beginnings and frustrations; it is relevant to take into account
also a guideline that may lead the paths to follow in order to solve the problem or the question
thus, the focus will not be lost.
Clarifying theories: Social Learning, TPR approach to language teaching, Thinking skill
overview, Classroom environment, Universal Grammar Theory
The second step to be taken into account is clarifying theories. (Sagor, 2000) It allows the
research to be more clear and specific in the steps the teacher should follow in order to find an
answer to the question. The same for the results and experiences obtained by other researchers in
similar conditions of population, class environment or established problems.
The third step consists on identifying the research question. (Sagor, 2000) Once the focus is
established it is essential to guide the solution of the inquiry arose from the identified problem in
order to focus the research and define the specific issues to be intervened.
The fourth step is collecting data (Sagor, 2000). Here it is important to understand that there
should be multiple and independent instruments to gather data when solving one question to be
assured of the validity of the results. This sources of data are numerous and may come from
observations, children’s work, class data transcriptions, questionnaires or field notes. The key is
that researcher may use all the instruments to be assured that the problem is being boarded from
different points so the solution to the problem will be effective.
To continue, the fifth step should be analyzing the collected data, in here, the researcher should
sort, sift and rank the collected data (Sagor 2000) to have a better view of the phenomenon given
within the classroom, in this case, the researcher may have a wide view of the problem presented
in the classroom and the strategies to follow in order to solve the mentioned problem.
After analyzing the data, the researcher should report the results, (Sagor, 2000) in this sixth
step, the teacher can help other investigators share the action plans followed when having
difficulties in the teaching-learning process. This could be aimed at the establishment of a
collective base of common issues presented in classrooms and the way these issues may be
solved.
Finally, the seventh step in taking informed action or action planning; (Sagor, 2000) here, the
researcher may take action when planning lessons or developing academic programs, thus, the
identified problem can be solved and the teaching-learning process becomes a more satisfactory
and successful process.
3.4 INSTRUMENTS
In this research, the instruments to gather the data will be videos, recorded during the developing
of the activities, the artifacts made by the students and the field notes taken by the researcher, for
that matter, it will be possible to identify the impact of the intervention as well as the problem
areas presented during the implementation of the proposal.
In a third stage of the analysis, the data will be collected and identified according to the sequence
proposed by (Ferrance, 2000). Regarding this research, there is quantifiable and qualitative data
that will be analyzed in different categories. There is a quantifiable analysis in aspects of
attention and reaction, with the corporal language of the students when listening to an instruction
or a statement in English along with the aspects of the handicrafts of the students that can be
classified and charted. On the other hand, there are qualitative variables that should be taken into
account, such as the participation, the interest of the students towards the class as well as the
social interaction among them.
For this purpose, hereunder there will be chart a chart that has a brief description of the activities
designed. The language ability intended to develop complemented with the thinking skill
involved in the process. I am presenting an activity chart describing the relationship between
language abilities and thinking skills to be developed in my intervention.
CHART N° 2 ACTIVITIES DESCRIPTION
ACTIVITY DESCRIPTION-LANGUAGE
ABILITY
INVOLVED THINKING
SKILL
“The hello song” Warming up. Oral repetition through
rhythm and movement performance.
Repetition
Imitation
Mimicking
Prayer
Warming up. Oral repetition through
rhyme and movement performance.
Repetition
Imitation
Mimicking
Relate
Match sound
“onomatopoeia”
with image
Diagnosis. Phonemic awareness. Match
Observe
Relate-point
Build a monster
(body parts)
Follow instructions using previous
vocabulary. Action performance through
concrete material.
Instruction following
Transference (vocabulary).
Touch the right
body part (song)
Match, sound-image with movement. Match
Identify
Make groups with
counters
Perform instruction. Listen and move
counters.
Identify
Classify
Participate in “the
fish race”
Name numbers without sequencing.
Attention and participation through
vocabulary acquisition.
Nominate
Discrimination
Build the castle
with the right shape
form
Follow modeled instructions and
commands.
Imitation
Find the hidden
shape
Readiness. Find concrete elements within
an entire environment responding to
listening stimulus.
Discrimination
Moppet with paper
bags (family
members)
Follow instructions using previous
vocabulary. Action performance through
concrete material.
Follow instructions
Application of knowledge
“how’s the
weather” song
Oral repetition through rhythm and
movement performance. Relate the
current weather condition.
Repetition
Imitation
Association
Build the weather
chart
Recognize, point and say the different
weather conditions.
Association
Discrimination
Choose the right
clothing item
Relate and identify weather and clothing. Association
Application of knowledge
Discrimination
Fill the treasure
chest (shapes)
Choose the right shape according to an
instruction.
Follow instructions
Application of knowledge
Make the necklace
(colors)
Follow modeled instructions and
commands. Action performance through
concrete material
Follow instructions
Association
Discrimination
Classification
Fishing color fish Choose the right element according to the
information provided, spoken and
illustrated.
Association
Application of knowledge
Follow instructions
Act on evidence is another aspect of the action research referred to develop a plan, according to
the data collected, to make a change and determine which change comes out from each
intervention plan, to be sure of what kind of change is being produced within the teaching-
learning environment. This plan will be developed once the data is analyzed.
Finally, evaluation of the results takes part for this research. “Assess the effects of the
intervention to determine if improvement has occurred” (Ferrance, 2000). This idea is
fundamental to find out if the data collected can support the evidences shown and, if not, show
what changes can be applied to obtain different results.
3.4 POPULATION
The population correspondent to this research is the group 101 who receives class during the
morning shift, this group has thirty-four students ranging in age from five to seven years old;
most of them are boys and only eleven students are girls, this is noticeable when they have to
interact in the breaks or during their free time, since the games are more about physical contact
and the language they use is harsh.
Related to the activities during their free time, they prefer to watch TV programs such as cartoons
or reality shows at night. Regarding to their academic activities at home, some of the students do
their homework helped by an adult who is not a parent but a big brother, a grandmother an uncle
or a nanny.
On the other hand, their academic performance within the school, the students are able to copy
phrases and numbers in the mother tongue as well as associate images with quantity and with
words, but this written production is not autonomous as well as the oral production, during the
classes, the students do not produce statements or enouncements in an academic context which
demonstrates that the priority is the developing of the writing skill.
3.5 ETHICAL ISSUES
This research project counts with the required legal specifications to intervene a group of students
who are underage, for this purpose it is presented a copy of the consent form signed by the
parents or legal tutors of the students which authorize the pedagogical intervention (Check Annex
Table).
3.6 UNITS OF ANALYSIS
The focus of analysis is also centered on specific units of analysis; this will allow the study of the
gathered data. In this case, observation will be an artifact used to collect data, through field notes
taken during the process, these field notes contain specific information about the classroom
environment as well as the developing of the English class. Details as the listening
comprehension of simple statements, the following of instructions and basic commands are
registered in this artifact.
The videos are also an important artifact since with these it is possible to determine, in addition to
the foregoing, elements as the time that takes students to perform and the basic sound
discrimination they may have when listening a simple statement, an instruction or a basic
command.
The works of the students are also part of this analysis since with those, it is possible to find if
they could follow an instruction or if there is a modification the researcher should do during the
project implementation.
Finally, the artifacts are also an element susceptible of being analyzed. In this it is possible to
identify strengths and weaknesses of the English class as well as the following of instructions and
the performance of commands. During the implementation, two surveys will be applied, one at
the beginning of the process and one at the end which will allow a comparison between the
appropriation of knowledge when beginning and finishing the intervention, as well as the
emotional disposition students have when attending an English class.
CHAPTER IV
4.1 PEDAGOGICAL PROPOSAL
This proposal is based on songs with videos as a tool to develop listening skills in first grade
students. For this, it is necessary to apply the TPR method which helps students to integrate in the
process through something that is common for them: physical activity. In this sense, the input
will be done through video songs pertinent and related to the curriculum established in the school
for first grade which includes, thematic axes such as basic instructions, greetings, body parts in
which is referred to the vocabulary aspect and answering to basic questions referred to their
immediate context. Thus, it is possible to evidence the motivation and disposition of the students
towards the process of learning a foreign language.
This proposal is organized in four stages providing an organized process of implementation.
These stages are developed as is described below:
First stage: consists in an input process made through video songs. In this process, the students
receive the necessary information. This process also aims at generate readiness, disposition and
interest in the language. The songs with videos also spawn interest due to the rhythm and rhyme
of the songs, the colors of the characters and images as well as the movement that accompanies
the music. The videos with songs chosen were selected according to the topic of the scope and
sequence proposed by the researcher which in turns, responds to the curriculum of the English
area approved by the school.
In a second stage, learners try to repeat specific elements of the song such as vocabulary and
movements. In a third stage, the input is complemented with an output activity that could be
done in two ways: a handicraft activity or an activity involving the participation of the students.
These activities are described in more detail in the lesson plans and are headed to a specific topic
chosen by children interest and, as expected, goes along with the required contents of the
curriculum: The Pirate ship. This topic allows to catch the attention of children as well as follow
a sequence with the topics of the curriculum, as it was mentioned, connecting the contents to
create a communicative and welcoming environment within the classroom.
To reach this objective, the proposal will be organized in a curricular chart, designed to have an
intervention of ten lessons in which the curriculum of the school is developed in more detail,
through the lesson plan, the presentation of the topic (input) as well as the developing of
activities (output) are contemplated in a topic per class as described below:
Songs and Rhymes:
In the first part of the class students begin with the routine established since the first class,
responding to the curricular requirement of basic greetings. This greeting is presented as a song
with simple vocabulary that students can repeat easily accompanied with movements. After the
song, students do the same dynamic with a prayer that is not a song but is composed in verse,
which facilitates the process of memorization and promotes the process of repetition. The same
process is given with a song about the weather, in this case, the song not only reinforces the
previously described processes but also permits to frame a relation between the foreign language
and the real context.
Video songs
After the routine that every class presents, no matter what the topic is, the teacher presents a song
in video to introduce the topic of the day (input). In this moment, the video song is presented at
least two times in order to help students to hold as much information as possible to obtain better
results when looking for the output.
While watching the video, the students were totally focused on the topic, there was not a source
of distraction and their attitude was calm and silent. During the video, teacher makes some pauses
to inquire about the topic or any kind of information collected by the learners, this questions are
done since students do not have yet the ability to understand a simple statement or question, this
inquiry aims at generate a brainstorm where the students who haven’t been able to understand the
content of the video, may be connected with the class and indirectly they can receive help from
their classmates.
TPR exercises
Once the input is achieved, the students proceed to develop the output. At this point, the teacher
gives the instruction and students start to perform the activity, some of the activities make
reference to contests or grouped games (see annex field notes or lesson plan) so students can
interact among them and keep motivation while performing an action following the instruction
given in English, this avoids translation and the enthusiasm of the students which makes the
learning process more significant. To clarify these elements, here is an example of the developing
of each class presented in one lesson plan.
SCHOOL PRADO VERANIEGO IED SEDE B
LESSON PLAN No. 5
MORNING SHIFT
TEACHER´S NAME: Silvia Venegas
DATE: March 16th /2016
GRADE: 1st Grade (101-102)
TOPIC: Numbers
TIME: 2 hours
GOAL: Learners will recognize the numbers 1-10 in written and spoken form.
ACHIEVEMENT INDICATORS
1. Learners will recognize numbers from 1 to 10.
2. Learners will be able to identify the numbers in different order
3. Learners actively participate in all the activities proposed by the teacher.
GRAMMAR: (Grammatical structure): simple communicative present.
KEY VOCABULARY: numbers from 1 to 10
MATERIALS: video, common classroom supplies, fishies drawings
THINKING SKILLS: IDENTIFICATION, ASSOCIATION, DISCRIMINATION
BASIC LEARNING DEVICES: ATTENTION, MOTIVATION, MEMORY, VISUAL PERCEPTION,
AUDIOVISUAL PERCEPTION.
WARM UP TIME: 5 minutes
Learners will sing the hello song and the prayer worked the previous classes.
CONTROLLED PRACTICE: TIME: 25 min
1. Teacher will show a story video about numbers
2. Teacher will encourage the learners to repeat the numbers presented in the video.
3. The teacher will provide some counters. Then will say a number from 1-10 so they make
groups with the counters.
LISTENING ACTIVITY TIME: 25 minutes
Learners will listen to the teacher who will present a chant (fishies sequence), including
numbers. The learners will have to learn the chant and discover the sequence according to the
number order. The teacher will take some supporting images.
CONTROLLED PRACTICE II: TIME: 25 minutes
Learners will play a game along with the teacher. The fish race the teacher will use 6 paper
fishes and 10 circles in front of them, learners will pick a number from a bag and tell it in English
so the fish can move forward. The first fish over the finish line wins.
PROJECT IMPLEMENTATION: TIME: 20 min.
The teacher will present the project and will introduce what it is going to be about. They will have
time to practice the first part which they have been practicing during this session.
PRE-WRITING: TIME: 20 min.
The teacher will introduce the numbers, both written and symbol, and copy on the board, so they
associate number and symbol. Then, they will play together a memory game associating both
number forms.
CLOSURE: The teacher will make all the learners to stand up. Then will say- organize in groups
of_____. The numbers always changes.
OBSERVATIONS______________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________
_______________________________ ____________________________
TRAINING TEACHER´S SIGNATURE SCHOOL TEACHER´S SIGNATURE
During the process of the intervention it is necessary to design a chronogram with detailed
activities, topics, and an schedule of implementation in order to organize the gathering of the data
as well as the objectives raised in each class that will complement the general objective of this
research, the following chart will describe the activities that will be performed during each one of
the interventions.
CHART N° 3 IMPLEMENTATION CHRONOGRAM
CLASS
NUMBER/
DATE
TOPIC Standard (Ministerio
de Educación)
OBJECTIVE
(school’s
curriculum)
GENERAL
OBJECTIVE OF
THE
IMPLEMENTATION
(per class)
IMPLEMENTATION
ACTIVITY
EXPECTED
OUTCOME
1st class / Feb.
17th
Numbers
1 to 10
I understand chants,
rhymes and nursery
rhymes and I
demonstrate it with
gestures and words
(listening)
I copy and transcribe
understood words and
words of frequent use
within the classroom
(writing)
I Follow instructions
related to class activities
proposed by the teacher
(listening)
Recognize and
relate numbers
and quantity
Students will recognize
numbers from 1 to 10 in
orally and graphically
Presentation of the
video about numbers
based on a history
(Patch the pirate)
Make groups with
concrete material
(sticks) according to the
instruction
Rhyme about numbers
(10 to 1) as support for
the intellectual
reversibility process,
pre-writing, memory
and listening.
Game: in the board
there are some fish with
10 squares ahead.
Students pick up a ball
with a number, if
student tell the right
number the fish
advances this number of
squares
Students should
recognize numbers
from 1 to 10
Students should
identify numbers in
any order
Students should
participate actively
during the proposed
activities
2nd
class / Feb.
24th
Basic
greetings
I recognize when
somebody talks to me in
English and I react in
verbal and nonverbal
way.
Greet and
leave
assertively
matching
verbal and
nonverbal
language.
Students will perform
simple greeting
expressions throughout
verbal and nonverbal
language
Welcome chant using
movements
goodbye chant using
movements
Routine prayer using
movements in
agreement with the text
Game: stop-move-stop
following instructions
of corporal movement
(march-hop-run-
freeze…)
Students will be able
to express basic
greetings coherently
using verbal and
nonverbal language
Students will
recognize expressions
and basic words
related to the topic
3rd
class / March
2nd
Body
parts
I understand the general
idea of a story told by
my teacher when it is
supported by
movements, gestures
and voice changes
Relate
instructions
with actions.
Students will
demonstrate
comprehension about
body parts throughout
the execution of simple
actions including the
new vocabulary.
Basic greetings
Video song about body
parts “head, shoulders,
knees and toes”
Draw a monster and
build it according to the
attributes given by the
teacher
Recognize the body
parts of a partner
throughout interaction
among students.
Students will be able
to recognize body
parts in graphic and
verbal way.
4th
class / March
8th
Family
members
I demonstrate
comprehension of
simple questions about
me, my family and my
surroundings.
Identify and
name the
members of
my family.
Students will recognize
simple vocabulary
related to the family
members and will be
able to relate it with his
/her own familiar
surroundings.
Greetings and routines
To listen and sing a
chant about body parts
modelling by the
teacher
To assign physical
attributes to each family
member
To relate the family
members with the
Students will be able
to identify, name and
recognize the principal
family members
Students will be able
to describe basic
physical attributes of
their family members.
fingers through a rhyme
or chant.
To draw the family
members.
5th
class / March
16th
Figures
and
shapes
I understand short and
simple descriptions of
objects and known
places.
To assign
attributes to
figures and
shapes.
Students will recognize
and name basic shapes
and will relate them
with a real
environment.
Greetings and routines
Students will follow
and tie patterns with
shapes
Game: students in
groups will build
figures with their body.
Some shapes will be
distributed around the
classroom, with the
instruction, students
should bring the correct
shape
Students will have their
eyes blindfold, touching
the shape they will have
to guess which one is.
An image of mixed
shapes will be given to
the students; they will
have to look for the
indicated shape and
color it.
Each student will search
and reach objects with
the correct shape.
Students will be able
to discriminate and
differentiate basic
shapes and name them.
6th
class / March
30th
How is
the
weather
today?
I understand short and
simple descriptions of
known objects and
places.
Recognize and
identify
weather
changes in my
surrounding.
Students will recognize
the different weather
conditions that can be
found in their city or in
the places they visit.
A video song about
weather will be
presented.
Students will make a
Students will be able
to identify different
weather conditions in
their immediate
surrounding.
weather chart.
Students will participate
in a contest finding out
the appropriate outfit
for each weather
condition.
7th
class / April
6th
Colors I understand short and
simple descriptions of
known objects and
places.
Recognize and
identify basic
colors that
could be
seeing in my
surrounding.
Students will associate
colors with their
immediate context and
concrete reality.
A video song about
color will be presented,
it will be related to
landscapes and food.
Students will make a
necklace with
macaroons; they should
paint it according to the
instruction.
Students will identify
phonetically the
mentioned colors
Students will use
correctly each color to
build the necklace.
8th
class / April
20th
Clothing
items
I understand sequences
related to habits and
routines.
I mention what I like
and dislike.
Identify steps
of their daily
routine
expressed in
English.
Students will recognize
daily clothing items
used by themselves or
their relatives.
Students will use small
pieces of clothing to
make garments
according to the
instruction and they will
dress their own
drawings of themselves.
Students will
recognize the clothing
item mentioned by the
teacher
Students relate the
previous concepts
(weather conditions) to
the new thematic.
9th
class / April
27th
Adjectives Describe some
characteristics of myself,
other people, places and
weather conditions.
Classifies
objects
according to
its form, size
and
characteristics.
Students identify
adjectives in common
use objects.
Students will have
images with objects
with certain
characteristics and they
will classify in boxes
accordingly (heavy:
elephants, hammers,
bricks / light: feathers,
papers, leafs)
Students comprehend
when a characteristic
of an element is
mentioned and they
classify it.
11th
class / May
11th
Opposites. I describe some
characteristics of myself,
other people, places and
weather conditions.
Recognize and
associate
elements
identifying
characteristics.
Students will discriminate
and classify different
elements, according to its
attributes
Students will participate
in a contest. (Pick a
boo) they need to find
pairs of opposites.
Students will associate
different concepts with
each other and with
previous knowledge
(numbers)
To design these lesson plans, there was taking into account the curricular plan designed to articulate the knowledge mandatory in the
school and demanded by the Ministerio Nacional de Educación
CHAPTER V
5.1 ANALYSIS AND INTERPRETATION OF THE DATA
Along this section, the analysis of the data collected will be described. Likewise, the answer of
the question of this research will also be sought. The mentioned analysis was done through the
triangulation of the information; for this process, it is necessary to have three sources of data
collection, in this case, are the artifacts, the field notes and the videos recorded throughout the
interventions.
During the analytical process three processes were followed: Assembling data, coding the data
and comparing the data.
Assembling data: in this step, the researcher collects all the information needed to support the
parameters suggested for this research, as well as the organization and classification that allows
a better management of the information. In this study, the data was gathered through field notes,
video recordings and artifacts.
Coding the data: during this stage, the data was categorized and classified in order to find
particular patterns that help to answer the research question, along with the way it is coded that
can be quantitative or qualitative. The following chart sums up the way how information is
classified.
CHART N° 4 CATEGORIES OF ANALYSIS
It is worth stressing that the last category proposed (welcoming environment) is analyzed under
the guidelines of the qualitative data.
Comparing the data: on this stage, the researcher makes a comparison between all the data
already collected and classified in order to identify the possible coincidences and patterns based
on three proposed categories.
CATEGORIES
STUDENTS’
PERFORMANCE
TPR
EFFECTIVENESS
WELCOMING
ENVIRONMENT
Subcategory Subcategory Subcategory
Number of words
acquired
Response to basic
commands
Performance of
the action
Facial expressions
and gestures
Participation
Interaction
Readiness
Interest
Students’ performance
The class performance in this research is taken into consideration for the analysis since it is
possible for the researcher to find out regularly, if the methodology used is convenient and
effective as well as set a permanent evaluation of the process of learning developed by the
students within the class.
During the implementation, the boost of the development of the students’ performance during the
lesson was evident, since they were able to repeat some words listened in the videos, along with
following a simple instruction. In this sense, students were not able to answer to the instruction
verbally but they clearly were able to perform an action in response to the verbal statement of the
teacher. In this issue, the category that will permit this analysis is the number of words performed
by each student and the number of students who perform an action in response to a basic
command. In this way, the data is collected through excerpts of recordings made during the class.
Students’
performance
TPR
effectiveness
Welcoming
environment
TPR effectiveness
Since the TPR is the method used to implement this research project, it is necessary to describe
and analyze if the students can develop or perform movements, gestures or expressions to
communicate and if the acquisition of the foreign language has the same characteristics of the
acquisition of the mother tongue: listening, imitating and acting.
This method also aims at reduce emotional barriers, anxiety or fear since the students are more
interested in participating in all the activities than in the formal learning process, in this way, the
TPR effectiveness is measured with the performance of the activities, the facial expressions and
the gestures of the students when attempting to communicate in the foreign language.
Welcoming environment
This aspect of the research is taken into account since the age of the students gives the
opportunity to start a successful learning process. During the rest of the school years they will
have foreign language lessons, as it is established by the educational law. (Ministerio de
Educación Nacional, 2015). In this sense, a welcoming environment helps students to learn
stress-free and to gain self-confidence, which delays any emotional barriers that can be presented,
lowering difficulties and helping to the resolution of problems of the everyday life. Related to the
present research, the data will be measured taking into account the participation during the class,
the readiness of the students towards the knowledge, the interaction among them during the
developing of the activities and the interest they demonstrate in the class.
5.2 ANALYSIS OF SUBCATEGORIES
The first subcategory proposed is the number of words acquired by the students. Using this
principle, it is possible to find out if the students had a significant increment in the use of words
in foreign language during the class activities and the routines established for the lessons, the
second subcategory is the response to basic commands. This, to find out if the performance of
activities have some effect in the learning process
The TPR effectiveness will be classified through two subcategories, the performance of the
action whose purpose is to check if the student develops or not the activity proposed and the
facial expressions and gestures; this one, to identify if the student imitates (regarding to the
nonverbal aspect) and / or repeats (regarding to the verbal aspect). For this purpose, a chart was
designed to synthesize the information and allow a better comprehension:
CHART N° 5 ANALYSIS MATRIX
Activity 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34
“The hello
song”
Prayer
Match sound
“onomatopoeia”
with image
Build a monster
(body parts)
Touch the right
body part
(song)
Make groups
with counters
Participate in
“the fish race”
Build the castle
with the right
shape form
Finds the
hidden shape
Moppet with
paper bags
(family
members)
“how’s the
weather” son
Build the
weather chart
Choose the
right clothing
item
Fill the treasure
chest (shapes)
Make the
necklace
(colors)
Fishing color
fish
Indicators:
Each one of the categories and subcategories described below has some indicators to be
developed and analyzed. Also, in these indicators, the criteria used to analyze the information
will be described; these indicators also respond to the basic standards for foreign language
proposed by the Ministerio Nacional de Educación, wherewith allows the research to have a
specific and concrete analysis of the development of the intervention.
Hereafter is the description of the mentioned indicators, and the way they will be classified in the
matrix analysis previously presented.
Green Check
Demonstrates comprehension through gestures and words.
Responds to an instruction in verbal and nonverbal way
Recognizes and reacts to the language in verbal and nonverbal way
Comprehends an idea supported by movements and gestures
Blue Check
Occasionally demonstrates comprehension through gestures or words.
Intermittently responds to an instruction in verbal and nonverbal way
Partially recognizes and reacts to the language in verbal and nonverbal way
Partially comprehends an idea supported by movements and gestures
Yellow check
Demonstrates comprehension either through gestures or words.
Responds to an instruction either in a verbal or nonverbal way
Recognizes and reacts to the language either in verbal or nonverbal way
Comprehends an idea supported either by movements or gestures
Red Check
Does not demonstrate comprehension through gestures or words.
Does not respond to an instruction, neither in a verbal nor in a nonverbal way
Does not recognizes or reacts to the language, neither in verbal nor in nonverbal way
Does not comprehend an idea supported by any movements or gestures.
The last proposed category has four subcategories that will be classified in a different chart due to
the nature of the analysis proposed to approach this data. The first subcategory proposed is the
interaction, this aims to identify how the students communicate with each other and how this
phenomenon is modified during this pedagogical intervention. The second subcategory is the
readiness which looks to identify how the students are facing the introduction of a foreign
language in their formal learning processes. The third subcategory is the participation that is
measured taking into account the passive and active roles that a student can play during an
activity and the fourth category is the interest that is described as the importance that a student
gives to the topic, the lesson or the class in general.
Hereafter is presented the mentioned chart of qualitative analysis of data, where it is possible to
understand how the subcategories are interpreted and in which way this categories can be applied
in this research. Next, a brief definition of the category will be presented, a description of what
happened within the developing of the class and a conclusion that will take into account the two
previous elements to recognize
CHART N° 6 QUALITATIVE ANALYSIS
DEFINITION DESCRIPTION CONCLUSION
Interaction Wagner (1994) defines
interaction as “reciprocal events
that require at least two objects
and two actions. Interactions
occur when these objects and
events mutually influence one
another. An instructional
interaction is an event that takes
place between a learner and the
learner's environment. Its
purpose is to respond to the
learner in a way intended to
change his or her behavior
toward and educational goal”.
(Wagner 1994)
In the beginning of the classes,
the students had problems when
interacting among them, with
the teacher and with some of the
elements given to develop
handicraft activities. However,
these interactions showed a
change while developing the
different activities proposed.
This was a common factor in all
the interventions.
Taking into account the
definition of interaction, it is
possible to affirm that students
can improve the way how they
interact with their environment,
provided that the teacher acts as
a mediator among the
knowledge and the student.
Readiness According to Gray (2017?)
“Academic readiness is the
degree to which a student is
prepared for a learning
experience (…) a student’s
readiness level is not static, but
constantly evolving”
Readiness is all the information
previous to the acquisition,
useful to build associations,
relations and discrimination,
some readiness examples are
presentation or display of the
language to the class,
brainstorms, encouragement to
participate, broadcasting of new
words, repetition and aims to the
unconscious
During the interventions, the
students face an experience that
includes new sounds, proper of
English (/r/ /th/). They also
learnt by heart chants and
rhymes in order to get familiar
with language and most of them
were able “show and tell”.
Stories, flash-cards and songs in
English were presented, so they
started with basic associations.
For some, this associations
remained during the internship,
others, partially pronounced or
repeated.
Readiness has to be a long-
lasting process in order to
activate LAD processes.
Definitely, it was necessary to
permit receptive processes such
as accurately-listening,
imitation, repetition and
nomination and mimicking.
Participation Participation, according to
Turner and Patrick (2004) is
“both a productive work habit,
likely to contribute to learning,
as well as evidence of student
motivation to learn”. Thus, the
teacher is not responsible of this
The activities designed to apply
during the interventions aimed
to promote in the students a
significant level of participation,
either being an active part of the
activities, supporting their
partners when participating or
According to the previous
statements, it is possible to
affirm that the students were
leading their own learning
processes, helped by the
mediation of the teacher; this
because they are more focused
learning aspect, but the behavior
of the student is an important
component of this process.
creating artifacts with their own
hands. In this way, and taking
into account the numerous
group, all the students were able
to be active participants in the
developing of the class.
on the activity that includes
contests and dynamic issues
than in the learning process
itself
Interest Schraw and Flowerday define
situational interest as a
“temporary interest that arises
spontaneously due to
environmental factors such as
task instructions or an engaging
text”. This situational interest
can also be defined as the way
how students are connected with
a topic, a lesson or a project
developed to reinforce the
knowledge within the classroom
Along the implementation, the
students were connected with
the activities that implied more
physical activities such as
dancing, acting, performing
even the ones that had minor
body movement but represented
a physical activity such as
painting, modelling and
building, everything used to
create handicraft artifacts.
This situational interest can be
given in the classroom using
different materials or activities
that will make a significant
change in the routine of the
classes and will awake the
interest and compromise on the
part of the students with their
learning process.
Having this qualitative analysis in mind, thereupon concrete examples of situations given within
the class will be presented; these examples support the statements proposed in the previous chart.
To validate the first category submitted, Interaction. Thereupon an excerpt of a transcript of a
video recorded during the intervention number seven is presented, in this intervention, the topic
of the class was the family members, and in one of the activities the students played a bingo
game.
Teacher: ok guys now all of you have a big bingo card (the teacher shows the bingo card
to the students) and you have seven small cards that you will place in the right place (the
teacher shows the cards)
Student: teacher yo no tengo papelitos
Teacher: you don’t have because you will work with Miguel. (The teacher places the
bingo game in the middle of both students’ desks)
Student 1 (talking to his partner) Miguel saque el pega stick (the student takes off his
glue from his backpack)
Student 2: para que
Student 1: porque aquí están los mismos dibujos que en las fichitas
Student 2: pero la profe no dijo que había que pegarlos, pregúntele y verá
Student 1: no! Pregúntele usted!
In this excerpt it is possible to identify how the students generate a positive interaction over the
topic of the class, and even though their interaction is presented in mother tongue, they are
helping each other to understand the situation and the instruction given by the teacher.
In furtherance of the second category, readiness, it is reliable to say that the presentation of the
video songs each class, as well as the activities aimed at reinforce the repetition of rhythms and
rhymes, are important components of the predisposition to learn a foreign language, these
components may conform the previous knowledge that, further on, the student will use to build
interpretations, meanings and familiarity with the foreign language.
By doing so, even though the students have different topics each session, they show a good
attitude toward the established routine. This was evidenced during all the sessions as it can be
seen in the following excerpt of the field note taken during the fifth session
FIELD NOTES N° 5
SCHOOL Prado
Veraniego School
DATE: MARCH 16th 2016 HOUR: 9:45 – 11:30
TEACHER Silvia
Venegas
ADVISER: FANNY ABELLA GRADE: 101
ACTIVITY TEXTUAL
MARKER
ANALYSIS INTERPRETATION COMMENTS
AND
PROPOSAL
The class was
opened with the
established song
and prayer.
Once the prayer
is repeated, the
teacher presents
a video with a
short story
about numbers
where a pirate
and a parrot are
counting stars
and starfish
Since students
have been
repeating the
song along
with the
movements it is
getting easier
for them to
repeat more
words of the
vocabulary.
When students
acquire a habit
when starting a
class, it is better
for them since it
is a way to
regulate
emotions and
attitudes as well
as get ready for
the class.
Habits and routines are
important elements when
developing a class with
children or early learners,
since it facilitates the
readiness and disposition
towards the class, they now
what to expect and that
makes the teaching-learning
process more natural.
Habits and
routines is an
element that
should be
included into the
lesson plans in
order to have a
more organized
class.
To tackle the third category, the way how the students are the main subjects in their learning
process will be presented. Thus, the participation is an underlying component that needs to be
evaluated and beard in mind to analyze the aforementioned process and evaluate if the
intervention of this factor represents a meaningful change in the environment of the classroom.
Teacher: grab a ball and tell me the number (the teacher opens the pouch in front of the
student encouraging him to grab the ball, the child grabs the ball and gives it immediately
to the teacher)
Teacher: very good Dylan, tell me the number. (The student remains in silence and looks
at his partners. The teacher shows the ball with the number to the students)
Student: (screaming) cinco! (Once the student says the name of the number the rest of
them start repeating the same number)
As it can be seen, even though the students do not participate or express thoughts or feelings in
the foreign language, they demonstrate a remarkable enthusiasm in participating in the activity
which is an indication of the motivation the student has to learn and assume the main role in their
learning process. Hereafter is presented an observation of the room teacher made in the lesson
plan during this session in order to show a different point of view of the activities developed
during the internship.
To close this explanation of the qualitative analysis the interest will be described, as a
fundamental component of the welcoming environment that is important to initiate a more
successful teaching-learning process. To approach to this category, an excerpt of a transcript
made from a video recorded during the session number eleven of the internship is presented;
during this session, the students were working on the colors topic, and in this activity, the
students needed to build a color macaroni necklace following the indication of the teacher.
Teacher: ok guys now, in all of your groups you should have gems (macaroni) please
check if you have all the colors (the teacher had a group of colors to indicate to the class)
there should be one purple (the teacher shows the purple macaroni to the class while
walks over the classroom repeating the name of the color) one red, one blue, one green
and one yellow. (Teacher does the same gesture with each color) ok, now you will insert
first the purple one. Purple one (while talking, the teacher shows the purple macaroni to
all the students, they follow the teacher and take the right color, all the students are
focused on the activity and it is possible to listen just a few of them chattering in low
voice)
Student 1: (talking to his partner) no coja ese, que va primero el morado (the student is
helping his partner to find the right color)
Student 2: teacher ¿puedo hacer una manila en vez de collar?
Teacher: (nodding with the head) of course you can make a bracelet instead of a
necklace.
Student 3: ay teacher ¿yo también puedo?
Teacher: if you want you can make it, the most important thing is that you should insert
first the purple one, ok? The purple one. (The teacher repeats several times the name of
the color)
During this intervention the students were working with other material, different from the
habitual notebook and pencil, since this is a new way to develop a class, they demonstrate
curiosity and enthusiasm, they do not evidence distraction or apathy due to the nature of the
activity that warranties a physical actions (fine motor skills) with some cognitive processes
(attention, identification, classification), acquiring knowledge through experiences and senses.
5.3 DATA TABULATION AND ANALYSIS
Along this section the summary of the data gathered will be presented as well as the way how this
data is managed to identify if it is possible to affirm that the listening skills in first grade students
at Prado Veraniego School have mastered some enhancement during the present intervention.
In the first graph, the indicators proposed to analyze the activities described in the chart N° 4
(matrix analysis) are represented; here it is possible to identify that most of the students are
ranging between the green and blue zone (73%) with this, it is attainable to affirm that most of
the class can demonstrate comprehension of an idea through gestures or words, can react to the
language in verbal or nonverbal way and manifest that reacting also in verbal or nonverbal ways.
GRAPH N°1 INDICATORS
The second graph is based on the activities developed and the way how students performed or
reacted to each one of them. Here, it can be seen that only in six opportunities the group fell
behind the limit of ten students in the green zone, and just in five activities, the achievement of
41%
32%
19%
8%
INDICATORS
Green Zone Blue Zone Yellow zone Red Zone
the group fell behind that limit. On the contrary, the edge of the yellow zone never surpassed the
measure of ten students per activity and the limit of ten students surpassing the red zone was only
given in the diagnosis activity where the students were asked to match the onomatopoeia sound
of an animal with the correspondent image.
GRAPH N° 2 PERFORMANCE OF STUDENTS PER ACTIVITY
In this upcoming graph, the development of each student per activity is standardized, resulting in
a development where only seven students never reached the green zone in four or less activities
and only five students have their standards of yellow or red zone beyond the blue or green zone
0
5
10
15
20
25
Nu
mb
er
of
stu
de
nts
ACTIVITIES
Green Check
Blue Check
Yellow Check
Red Check
GRAPH N° 3 PERFORMANCE OF EACH STUDENT PER ACTIVITY
Finally, graph number four points out where the performance per student is also shown; however,
in this case the analysis is focused on the vocabulary acquisition. During the intervention of this
proposal it was possible to find that the students reached some level of acquisition and they
manifest it in different ways such performing actions, doing facial expressions and some others,
responding to the statement or basic command in an oral way, despite that variable was not taken
into account in this research.
In this graph all the events, during the activities, which assure the acquisition of new words are
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
16
18
S1 S2 S3 S4 S5 S6 S7 S8 S9
S10
S11
S12
S13
S14
S15
S16
S17
S18
S19
S20
S21
S22
S23
S24
S25
S26
S27
S28
S29
S30
S31
S32
S33
S34
PERFORMANCE PER STUDENT
GREEN BLUE YELLOW RED
summarized. To organize it, the main topics of the lessons were taken into account and the
principal words implemented during the course were chosen. In here, the number of words
acquired by the student according to the topic is registered.
GRAPH N° 4 VOCABULARY ACQUISITION
Body parts: legs, arms, eyes, ears, mouth, nose (five words)
Numbers: one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten
Shapes: circle, triangle rectangle, square,
Weather conditions: cloudy, sunny, windy, stormy, rainy.
Colors: yellow, green, blue, red, purple
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
s1 s2 s3 s4 s5 s6 s7 s8 s9 s10 s11 s12 s13 s14 s15 s16 s17 s18 s19 s20 s21 s22 s23 s24 s25 s26 s27 s28 s29 s30 s31 s32 s33 s34
VOCABULARY ACQUISITION
body parts numbers shapes weather conditions colors
As it is evident in the graph, there are some isolated cases where the students did not acquire any
word during the lesson, on the contrary, the acquisition of new words was remarkable in most of
the cases where the students were able to perform an instruction, even when it was given only in
a verbal way and the teacher did not perform any movement. This result, (thanks to the
interaction among them) was reached due to the action of repetition made by some students
which in turn, stimulated the same act in the rest of the group. Additionally, the routines
established for the class such as repeating the “hello song”, the prayer and the weather song every
session benefited the incorporation of new vocabulary.
To clarify the process of the intervention hereafter is presented a chart which synthetizes all the
followed procedures.
DIAGNOSIS INTERVENTION
PROCESS
FINAL ACHIEVEMENTS
Lack of foundational
skills
Progress in performance Participation
No language exposure Vocabulary presentation Interaction
Unreadiness First exposure to language Interest
Motivation Advancement in foundational skills
(listening)
Participation Vocabulary acquisition
Progress in readiness
CHAPTER VI
FINDINGS
Inasmuch as the proposed aim to this research was to find out how the listening skills in first
grade students could be fostered by using video songs, it is necessary to consider the main
aspects of the intervention.
First and foremost, it is imperative to mention how the video songs increased and complemented
the EFL class, making the lesson more engaging and pleasant to the students and more simple to
the teacher when planning and developing the class. Likewise, the application of the TPR method
was suitable since the students had a better comprehension of the foreign language without the
usage of the mother tongue.
The TPR method was favorable with the control of the class and the discipline within the
classroom since the attention of the students was focused on the topic of the class and on the
movement or activity they are performing.
This research also served the purpose of encouraging the students to improve the recognition of
the foreign language patterns, as well as some basic commands which also allowed them to
perform of short statements in verbal and nonverbal way.
According to the previous charts and the analysis they were subjected to, it is possible to affirm
that the students had a purposeful enhance of their listening skills, as well as important emotional
characteristics such as disposition, interest and readiness to create a welcoming environment to
make more effective their future learning experiences and approaches to the foreign language.
The students had different ways to participate, interact and show interest towards the class, some
of which were noticeable when they proposed responses or solutions to a question or when they
intervened spontaneously during the course of an activity and also when they talked to their
partners, trying to find the correct answer to an issue.
Video songs is a revolutionary ICTC tendency, with thousands of channels dedicated to produce
millions of audiovisual free and paid resources. They are useful, at least for presenting or
improving receptive skills and many other actions such as encouragement or instruction. This
resource must not be used in an isolated manner, because by itself could not be meaningful for
students. Pedagogical processes are required: contextualization, instruction and feedback.
CONCLUSIONS
The general objective, consisted on fostering listening skills using technological resources and
alternative methods to conduct the lessons, in order to set bilingual processes such as readiness,
LAD stimulation, basic lexical sets and chunks. This was achieved, proved by the acquisition of
new words, participation of the vast majority, performance of actions with the body and
performance of instructions through concrete material, as we can see in the data analysis.
In relation to the specific objectives, it is accurate to mention that students gradually understood
important elements of the spoken language such as basic commands, instructions and lexical
units. The TPR effectiveness contributed to the very concrete stage of language, being the first
students’ exposure.
By all means, video songs were fundamental due to their high content of illustration and TPR
encouragement, which focuses the class easily and for a long term. This resource is powerful to
motivate, engage and illustrate a receptive skill such as listening. But technology couldn’t be
possible without instruction and language presentation, the mediation of a teacher is imperative in
favor of the organization of mental processes and structuring of knowledge.
Also low-order thinking skills were involved during the intervention process, such as imitation,
repetition, mimicking, classification, execution, nomination and recognition. It is evident when
the attention of students was drawn to the performance of commands with concrete material and
the positive impact of these kind of activities.
The implementation of video songs as a didactic resource bestows a positive impact within the
classroom, helping the students to focus on the topic, the class, as well as giving the teacher an
opportunity to evaluate the way in which students are assimilating the knowledge since they are
concentrated watching a video song while the teacher can observe and intervene behaviors and
conducts in the classroom. This stimulates readiness and enhance the foundational skills.
Taking into account the definition of interaction, it is possible to affirm that students can improve
the way how they interact with their environment, provided that the teacher acts as a mediator
among the knowledge and the student, in the same way, the readiness, consider as a foundational
skill has to be a long-lasting process in order to activate LAD processes. Definitely, it was
necessary to permit receptive processes such as accurately-listening, imitation, repetition and
nomination, and mimicking
Additionally, it is possible to affirm that the students were leading their own learning processes,
helped by the mediation of the teacher; this because they are more focused on the activity that
includes contests and dynamic issues than in the learning process itself, generating situational
interest which can be given in the classroom using different materials or activities that will make
a significant change in the routine of the classes and will awake the interest and compromise on
the part of the students with their learning process.
With all this it is attainable to affirm that this intervention caused a positive impact in the student
population, creating interest and previous knowledge in the children that will furnish the
upcoming lessons and will facilitate the acquisition of the language in and outside the classroom.
RECOMMENDATIONS
To forthcoming studies in English learning, the use of TPR should be suggested as an efficient
method to guarantee the motivation and participation of young learners during the EFL lessons,
such as the use of video songs or any other didactic material that suggest visual perception. All
this because the teaching practice will be more bearable for the teacher and for the students since
this will increase significantly their interest toward the lesson and the activities.
Further on, the use of basic commands and simple statements can become in more complex
language utterances, the unconscious repetition given by the video songs accompanied by the
movement create a propitious environment that acts in favor of the vocabulary acquisition,
readiness and foundational skills.
In the same way, trainee teachers can establish a good rapport with the students and more
effective communication channels within the classroom by the use of different technologies and
didactic resources, empowering the students to express their thoughts and feelings.
The implementation of the TPR method is better when working with a small group, the results
are more noticeable and the group is more manageable; regardless, it is possible to obtain
important results with a larger group but this component could be considered as a limitation for
this research.
Besides, to include class environment in the lesson plans is a huge advance in young learner’s
language acquisition.
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ANNEXES
Annex 1(survey)
Annex 2 (diagnosis test)
Annex 3 (consent form)
Annex 4 (transcript intervention N° 8)
Transcript of the video, taken during the session number five of the intervention
The teacher enters into the classroom and the room teacher organizes the students, once they are
organized the teacher stays in front of the class.
Teacher: (waving with the hand) good morning class. Only five students answer the greeting
with good morning, the rest of the students are talking or organizing their school supplies.
Teacher: we are going to say hello with our song! (Starts singing and moving the hands to
accompany the song) hello, hello, hello to you, I say hello, when I see- you. During the
performance, all the students except for four who are still distracted, are doing the movements
along with the teacher, and around twenty are trying to repeat the lyrics of the song.
The teacher repeats the song, this time, more students try to repeat and all of them are doing the
movements with their hands.
Teacher: ok now we are going to thank god for all the things he gave us ok? Around five
students already know the routine so they start performing the movements of the prayer before
the teacher starts
Teacher: god made the sun (raise the hand opening and closing the hand) god made the trees
(moves the arm and the fingers simulating a growing tree) god made the mountains (moves the
arms from the outside in forming an arch) and god made me (points herself) oh thank you god
(shows thumbs up) for making the sun, for making the trees, for making the mountains and for
making me( repeats all the previous movements)
During this performance the students are more willing to develop the movements, even though
some of them seem bored, they perform the action along with their partners.
Teacher: Ok guys now organize the classroom. We are going to watch a video. (During the
instruction around fifteen students got distracted, especially the ones that are located at the back
part of the classroom, the rest of the students are confused about the instruction for this reason,
the teacher turns on the TV so they can comprehend the next activity. The organization of the
classroom takes around ten minutes, because about ten of the students need to move from their
desks. After the organization, the teacher catches the attention again, since the students who have
to move got distracted. After that, she turns off the light and plays a video with a short story
about numbers, where a pirate and a parrot count stars and starfish.
While presenting the video, the teacher makes pauses after each number, to encourage the
students to repeat the number.
Teacher: (pauses the video) ok, this is number one, (students repeat the number) around ten
students continue telling the following numbers, even before the teacher resumes the video.
When the video finishes, the students ask for more videos or for a repetition of the numbers
video. The teacher accepts and plays the video again, this time without pauses.
Teacher: Ok ready? We already finished our video. Go to your desks, everybody go to your
desks, go to your desks. (The teacher repeats the instruction several times while helping the
students to move the chairs and to get ready for the next activity.
Once the students are in their seats, the teacher takes off form her backpack a bag with several
Popsicle sticks.
Teacher: Ok guys, each one of you will have ten sticks, ten sticks, ok? For example, Nicol will
have ten sticks, (teacher touches the student shoulder and walks through the classroom), Gregory
will have ten sticks, and Miguel Angel will have ten sticks. (While walking she touches the
students shoulders, some students start to raise the hand
Student: teacher, nos vas a dar palitos?
Teacher: yes, you will have ten sticks.
The teacher starts distributing the sticks starting from the front part of the classroom to the back
part, at the beginning she shows the students each sticks and counts slowly while giving them,
but the rest of the class start talking and standing up from their seats so she counts the sticks
herself and distributes the material faster.
Once the students have their sticks the teacher stands in front of the classroom.
Teacher: ok count the sticks you have and tell me if someone is missing some. (Students do not
understand the instruction so some of them get distracted with the material). Teacher starts
counting the sticks while shows them how to do it, nevertheless, some of them are looking at the
teacher instead of counting their own sticks.
Teacher: (showing the sticks to the class) one, two, three (at this point, students start counting
along with the teacher) when the teacher points to the students’ sticks so they can associate the
action with the concrete elements they have.
Student: teacher, me falta uno
Teacher: are you missing one? (Student nods with the head and the teacher gives the missing
stick)
Teacher: ok now make groups of five (while giving the instruction, the teacher shows the
number with the hand) only three students understand and follow the instruction, so the teacher
starts counting the sticks showing the students the number of the group they should have)
Teacher: Everybody has five sticks? Let’s count all together, one, two, three, four, five (while
saying the number, the teacher counts her own sticks)
Students repeat the numbers but most of them are trying to build shapes or figures with the sticks.
Teacher: Ok, now we are going to make groups of eight sticks, everybody, eight sticks, (the
teacher repeats several times the number and makes the group with her sticks. There are students
who had not properly understood the instruction or the dynamic of the class. The teacher goes to
each group to explain the activity.)
Teacher: Ready? Everybody show me eight sticks one, two, three, four, five... (Teacher counts
until eight, five students raise their hands with the group of sticks, the teacher calls one student to
count the sticks). Ok Sara come on here, show me how many sticks you have. (The student does
not understand the instruction and she seems also shy of being in front of the class, the teacher
shows the hand of the student and starts to count the sticks she has along with the rest of the class
Teacher: Ok class do we have eight sticks? Eight sticks? (The teacher repeats several times the
number while showing up the sticks students answer yes in unison, however it is evident that
some of them are not paying attention to the activity but just repeating what their partners said.)
Teacher: Ok this was perfect, now please give me back my sticks, everybody put the sticks in the
bag, the sticks in the bag please. (The teacher passes a bag and shows the students to put the
sticks back on there)
While the students are organizing the sticks, the teacher draws ten fish on the board and a big
shark
Teacher: (talking to the students and pointing the fish) what is this? (Most of the students are
listening but they remain in silence) what is this? And this? And this? The teacher points to the
other fish
Student: pescados? (Other student repeats “pescados” while he take off a notebook,
approximately half of the class is still distracted with the sticks.
Teacher: yes, this is a fish. How many fish do we have here? (Teacher starts counting at the
same time she points to each fish) one, two, three… (Until ten) and this is a shark! Look their
scary teeth (teacher remarks on the shark teeth)
When she has the attention of the student, she starts telling a story with rhythm of a shark who eat
the fish, this time, none of the students repeat the story.
During the story all the students who are sitting on the back part of the classroom got distracted.
Once the activity is finished the teacher pastes four paper fish on the board and a starting line in
front of them, also draws ten circles in front of each one, at the end she draws a finish line. She
has five balls in a little pouch.
Teacher: Ok guys now we are going to make a competition, this is “the fish race” this is a
competition (Teacher repeats the word competition and says it slowly. One student associates the
word with the meaning in Spanish)
Student: una competicion profe?
Teacher: yes! We are going to do a competition, now I need you to make three groups but to
make it easier we are going to make it in the lines you are sitting, so I need one student for each
line.
The teacher chooses the participant from the first line, in this moment, all the students start
raising the hands and going to the front of the classroom.
Teacher: just one student per line, one student. (Makes the gesture with the hand and guides the
rest of the children back to their seats). Ok Dylan, come here and grab a ball. Ok everybody
quite, we all need to be quite (while saying that the teacher starts lowering the voice tone and puts
her finger on the mouth as a sign of silence) when the students are quite, the teacher explains the
dynamic of the game.
Teacher: ok Dylan pay attention, you will grab a ball from this pouch and you have to say the
number of the ball in English ok? If you don’t say the correct number you lose your turn ok?
(The student does not answer, he just stares at the teacher trying to understand what she is saying.
The students who are sitting in the front line and in the front part of the classroom remain in
silence trying to understand what is going on, the ones who are in the back part got distracted and
start playing among them)
Teacher: grab a ball and tell me the number (the teacher opens the pouch in front of the student
encouraging him to grab the ball, the child grabs the ball and gives it immediately to the teacher)
Teacher: Very good Dylan, tell me the number. (The student remains in silence and looks at his
partners. The teacher shows the ball with the number to the students)
Student: (screaming) cinco! (Once the student says the name of the number the rest of them start
repeating the same number)
Teacher: yes, but I need the number in English. Dylan, what number is this? In English?
Student: cinco.
Teacher: and cinco in English is five
Student: five
Teacher: Ok, so our fish will advance five positions, let’s count all together one, two, three, four,
and five. Ok good. Now Miguel, come here. (Teacher points at the student and indicates him to
go to the front) your fish is this one, you have to pick a ball, tell me the number in English and
then your fish will move forward ok? (The student nods with his head but seems confused) let’s
mix this balls and you tell me when you’re ready… ready? Are you ready Miguel? (Student nods)
ok pick a ball, everybody play attention because Miguel will pick the ball. (The student picks the
ball and gives it to the teacher), ok what is this number (the teacher shows the ball to the rest of
the students,
Students: Dos.
Student 2: No Matias, hay que decirlo en inglés.
Teacher: Yes Maira, and how do you say dos in English? (Student starts counting from one)
Student: one, two three
Teacher: yes! One, two three (the teacher makes emphasis on the number two and shows the
number with the hands) so Miguel, this is number? (Teacher expects for the student to
complement with the number but he does not, the teacher, showing the ball to the rest of the class
asks) this is the number..?
Students: dos.
Teacher: It is number two, what number it is?
Students: Two. (The student who picked the ball did not answer)
Teacher: Ok and now the last line, please come up here (while the teacher was trying to choose a
student, they all wanted to participate, most of the students were raising the hands and asking the
teacher to participate)
Teacher: Sara come here. (The student understands the instruction and goes to the front of the
classroom) pick a ball Sara. (The student picks a ball)
Student: Three!
Teacher: perfect Sara, this is number three! Now your fish will advance three boxes. One, two,
three. Ok let’s see now who is winning, the team number one is in the box number five! Very
good! The team number two is in the box number two and the team number three is in the box
number three! Very good. We need another participant from the team one! (Students get excited
and start raising the hand and asking for participation)
Teacher: Ok Emily come here and pick a ball. (This time the teacher does not make any signal
with the hand, the student goes to the front). Let’s mix this pouch and pick a ball (the student
picks a ball) Ok, I’m not going to watch, show the number to your partners and tell me which
number is, I will move your fish.
The student shows the number to the rest of her team
Teacher: Ok Emily, what number is it?
Student: Five.
Teacher: (talking to all the classroom) ok, let’s count all together and see what happens. One,
two, three, four, five. You win!
Students celebrate and ask for another turn in the game, however the class finishes and students
prepare all their school supplies and other elements to finish their school day
Annex N° 5 photographs of the necklace activity
Annex N° 6 photographs of fishing activity
ANNEX 7 (photographs of class routines “hello song” and prayer.)